The mechanisms and drug therapies of colorectal cancer and epigenetics: bibliometrics and visualized analysis
Siyu Tian, Min Chen

TL;DR
This study uses bibliometric analysis to explore the relationship between colorectal cancer and epigenetics, highlighting key research trends and potential drug therapies.
Contribution
The paper provides a systematic and visualized bibliometric analysis of epigenetics in colorectal cancer, identifying key players and emerging trends.
Findings
The United States, Harvard University, and authors like Ogino and Shuji lead in publications on CRC and epigenetics.
SEPT9 is highlighted as a blood test for early detection of colorectal cancer.
Vitamin D, gut microbiota, and probiotics are linked to CRC and epigenetic mechanisms.
Abstract
Numerous studies have demonstrated a link between epigenetics and CRC. However, there has been no systematic analysis or visualization of relevant publications using bibliometrics. 839 publications obtained from the Web of Science Core (WoSCC) were systematically analyzed using CiteSpace and VOSviewer software. The results show that the countries, institutions, and authors with the most published articles are the United States, Harvard University, and Ogino and Shuji, respectively. SEPT9 is a blood test for the early detection of colorectal cancer. Vitamin D and gut microbiota mediate colorectal cancer and epigenetics, and probiotics may reduce colorectal cancer-related symptoms. We summarize the specific epigenetic mechanisms of CRC and the current existence and potential epigenetic drugs associated with these mechanisms. It is closely integrated with clinical practice, and the…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvertising and Communication Studies · Organizational Management and Innovation
