March 1, 2012
Journal Article

Mass spectrometry in biomarker applications: from untargeted discovery to targeted verification, and implications for platform convergence and clinical application

Abstract

It is really only in the last ten years that mass spectrometry (MS) has had a truly significant (but still small!) impact on biomedical research. Much of this impact can be attributed to proteomics and its more basic applications. Early biomedical applications have included a number of efforts aimed at developing new biomarkers; however, the success of these endeavors to date have been quite modest - essentially confined to preclinical applications - and have often suffered from combinations of immature technology and hubris. Now that MS-based proteomics is reaching adolescence, it is appropriate to ask if and when biomarker-related applications will extend to the clinical realm, and what developments will be essential for this transition.

Revised: March 23, 2012 | Published: March 1, 2012

Citation

Smith R.D. 2012. Mass spectrometry in biomarker applications: from untargeted discovery to targeted verification, and implications for platform convergence and clinical application. Clinical Chemistry 58, no. 3:528-530. PNNL-SA-84378. doi:10.1373/clinchem.2011.180596