The human microbiome is complex, variable from person to person, essential for health, and related to both the risk for disease and the efficacy of our treatments. There are robust techniques to describe microbiota with high-Throughput sequencing, and there are hundreds of thousands of already-sequenced specimens in public archives. The promise remains to use the microbiome both as a prognostic factor and as a target for precision medicine. However, when used as an input in biomedical data science modeling, the microbiome presents unique challenges. Here, we review the most common techniques used to describe microbial communities, explore these unique challenges, and discuss the more successful approaches for biomedical data scientists seeking to use the microbiome as an input in their studies.
CITATION STYLE
Golob, J. L. (2023, August 10). Human Microbiomes and Disease for the Biomedical Data Scientist. Annual Review of Biomedical Data Science. Annual Reviews Inc. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-biodatasci-020722-043017
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