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Nature Biomedical Engineering

Nature Biomedical Engineering is a prestigious scientific journal that publishes cutting-edge research in the field of biomedical engineering. It covers a wide range of topics including the development of innovative medical devices, tissue engineering, drug delivery systems, and bioinformatics. The journal aims to bridge the gap between engineering and medicine, providing a platform for interdisciplinary collaboration and advancing the field of healthcare technology.

Nature Biomedical Engineering
Details
Abbr. Nat Biomed Eng
Publisher Springer Nature
Start 2016
End Continuing
Frequency Monthly
e-ISSN 2157-846X
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Metrics
h-index / Ranks: 2379 116
SJR / Ranks: 112 7951
CiteScore / Ranks: 108 37.10
JIF / Ranks: 92 28.1
Recent Articles
1.
Zhu G, Rahman C, Getty V, Odinokov D, Baruah P, Carrie H, et al.
Nat Biomed Eng . 2025 Mar; PMID: 40055581
The quantification of circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) in blood enables non-invasive surveillance of cancer progression. Here we show that a deep-learning model can accurately quantify ctDNA from the density distribution...
2.
Roth T, Lu J, McClellan A, Kernick C, Takacsi-Nagy O, Satpathy A
Nat Biomed Eng . 2025 Mar; PMID: 40055580
Current methods for the precise integration of DNA sequences into the genome of human T cells predominantly target exonic regions, which limits the choice of integration site and requires complex...
3.
Wang Z, Farooq A, Chen Y, Bhargava A, Xu A, Thomson M
Nat Biomed Eng . 2025 Mar; PMID: 40044819
Cancer progression can be slowed down or halted via the activation of either endogenous or engineered T cells and their infiltration of the tumour microenvironment. Here we describe a deep-learning...
4.
Sun Y, Tan W, Gu Z, He R, Chen S, Pang M, et al.
Nat Biomed Eng . 2025 Mar; PMID: 40044818
Foundation models are pretrained on massive datasets. However, collecting medical datasets is expensive and time-consuming, and raises privacy concerns. Here we show that synthetic data generated via conditioning with disease...
5.
Frei L, Gao B, Han J, Taft J, Irvine E, Weber C, et al.
Nat Biomed Eng . 2025 Mar; PMID: 40044817
Most antibodies for treating COVID-19 rely on binding the receptor-binding domain (RBD) of SARS-CoV-2 (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2). However, Omicron and its sub-lineages, as well as other heavily...
6.
Wilde J, Sun Y, Simpson S, Hill E, Fu Z, Bian E, et al.
Nat Biomed Eng . 2025 Mar; PMID: 40044816
Reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) contribute to the pathogenesis of neurodegeneration, but the inability to detect RONS in vivo in the central nervous system has confounded the interpretation of...
7.
Wang Z, Liu X, Ye T, Zhai Z, Wu K, Kuang Y, et al.
Nat Biomed Eng . 2025 Mar; PMID: 40038440
The intricate topology of vascular networks and the complex functions of vessel-rich tissues are challenging to reconstruct in vitro. Here we report the development of: in vitro pathological models of...
8.
Kirtane A, Bi J, Rajesh N, Tang C, Jimenez M, Witt E, et al.
Nat Biomed Eng . 2025 Feb; PMID: 40011582
Patients undergoing radiation therapy experience debilitating side effects because of toxicity arising from radiation-induced DNA strand breaks in normal peritumoural cells. Here, inspired by the ability of tardigrades to resist...
9.
Lin S, Xie G, He J, Meng L, Pang Y, Liu J
Nat Biomed Eng . 2025 Feb; PMID: 40000896
The efficacy of bacteriophages in treating bacterial infections largely depends on the phages' vitality, which is impaired when they are naturally released from their hosts, as well as by culture...
10.
Liu J, Cheng P, Xu C, Pu K
Nat Biomed Eng . 2025 Feb; PMID: 39984703
Advancing the understanding of the various roles and components of the immune system requires sophisticated methods and technology for the detection of immune cells in their natural states. Recent advancements...