Year in Review in 2019

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  • Personalized, or precision, medicine in type 2 diabetes mellitus is becoming a reality with new insights into the contributions of subgroup analyses. The roadmap to future implementation must take into account individual and subgroup variability in genetic architecture, environment, clinical measures, lifestyle, cost-effectiveness and treatment burden.

    • Louis H. Philipson
    Year in Review
  • Multikinase inhibitors are effective treatments for thyroid cancers, acting primarily as antiangiogenic agents. This year, advances have been made in selective targeting of RET and BRAF in patients with medullary and anaplastic thyroid cancers, respectively. However, Hürthle cell carcinomas have a unique genomic landscape with no dominant truncal drivers, precluding simplistic approaches to therapeutic targeting.

    • Vera Tiedje
    • James A. Fagin
    Year in Review
  • Feeding is regulated by defined neuronal pathways and circulating factors that ensure homeostatic balance is maintained. However, many emotion-affective pathways are also involved in communicating positive and negative valence on feeding behaviour. In 2019, several seminal discoveries were made that illuminate the complex interaction between homeostatic and hedonic feeding control mechanisms.

    • Herbert Herzog
    Year in Review
  • Pancreatic islets, which are critical for glucose homeostasis, are endocrine microorgans embedded in the exocrine pancreas; their location has often limited studying their function. In 2019, advances in islet biology were achieved with new technologies extending findings from several decades ago and with conceptual advances built on findings from other fields.

    • Susan Bonner-Weir
    Year in Review
  • Exercise is a potent modulator of intestinal microbiota composition and function. In 2019, several studies uncovered biologically important links between skeletal muscle and the gut microbiota, revealing how the gut bacteria respond to an exercise challenge and have reciprocal roles in fuel availability, muscle function and endurance performance.

    • John A. Hawley
    Year in Review
  • A key component in the development from fatty liver to hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the appearance of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). The precise cellular processes that trigger the advancement of NASH towards HCC are not well understood. In 2018, three key papers were published that help us better understand these processes.

    • Saskia Reibe
    • Mark A. Febbraio
    Year in Review
  • In 2018, more than 4,000 publications were dedicated to the study of the gut microbiota, and an important proportion investigated cardiometabolic disorders associated with overweight and obesity. Novel mechanisms and strategies have emerged, some of which were focused not only on specific bacteria or nutrients, but also on new metabolites.

    • Patrice D. Cani
    Year in Review
  • Circadian rhythm research is beginning to show how rhythms sustain health. Genome-wide transcriptome, metabolome and proteome studies have improved our understanding of circadian regulation. This knowledge is leveraged for behavioural interventions that optimize daily rhythms, the timing of drug delivery and the targeting of clock components to prevent or treat chronic diseases.

    • Satchidananda Panda
    Year in Review