Biomarkers: A general review

A biomarker is a biological observation that substitutes for and ideally predicts a clinically relevant endpoint or intermediate outcome that is more difficult to observe. The use of clinical biomarkers is easier and less expensive than direct measurement of the final clinical endpoint, and biomarke...

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Main Authors: Aronson, J, Ferner, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: John Wiley and Sons, Ltd. 2017
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author Aronson, J
Ferner, R
author_facet Aronson, J
Ferner, R
author_sort Aronson, J
collection OXFORD
description A biomarker is a biological observation that substitutes for and ideally predicts a clinically relevant endpoint or intermediate outcome that is more difficult to observe. The use of clinical biomarkers is easier and less expensive than direct measurement of the final clinical endpoint, and biomarkers are usually measured over a shorter time span. They can be used in disease screening, diagnosis, characterization, and monitoring; as prognostic indicators; for developing individualized therapeutic interventions; for predicting and treating adverse drug reactions; for identifying cell types; and for pharmacodynamic and dose-response studies. To understand the value of a biomarker, it is necessary to know the pathophysiological relationship between the biomarker and the relevant clinical endpoint. Good biomarkers should be measurable with little or no variability, should have a sizeable signal to noise ratio, and should change promptly and reliably in response to changes in the condition or its therapy.
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spelling oxford-uuid:ef4fb7fa-eb44-4b77-bb9c-c95233a256af2022-03-27T11:39:18ZBiomarkers: A general reviewJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:ef4fb7fa-eb44-4b77-bb9c-c95233a256afEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordJohn Wiley and Sons, Ltd.2017Aronson, JFerner, RA biomarker is a biological observation that substitutes for and ideally predicts a clinically relevant endpoint or intermediate outcome that is more difficult to observe. The use of clinical biomarkers is easier and less expensive than direct measurement of the final clinical endpoint, and biomarkers are usually measured over a shorter time span. They can be used in disease screening, diagnosis, characterization, and monitoring; as prognostic indicators; for developing individualized therapeutic interventions; for predicting and treating adverse drug reactions; for identifying cell types; and for pharmacodynamic and dose-response studies. To understand the value of a biomarker, it is necessary to know the pathophysiological relationship between the biomarker and the relevant clinical endpoint. Good biomarkers should be measurable with little or no variability, should have a sizeable signal to noise ratio, and should change promptly and reliably in response to changes in the condition or its therapy.
spellingShingle Aronson, J
Ferner, R
Biomarkers: A general review
title Biomarkers: A general review
title_full Biomarkers: A general review
title_fullStr Biomarkers: A general review
title_full_unstemmed Biomarkers: A general review
title_short Biomarkers: A general review
title_sort biomarkers a general review
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AT fernerr biomarkersageneralreview