'Nocturomics': transition to omics-driven biomarkers of nocturia, a systematic review and future prospects.

To systematically review studies that investigated different biomarkers of nocturia, including omics-driven biomarkers or 'Nocturomics'.

PubMed® , Scopus® , and Embase® were searched systematically in May 2022 for research papers on biomarkers in physiological fluids and tissues from patients with nocturia. A distinction was made between biomarkers or candidates discovered by omics techniques, referred to as omics-driven biomarkers, and classical biomarkers, measured by standard laboratory techniques and mostly thought from pathophysiological hypothesis.

A total of 13 studies with 18 881 patients in total were included, eight of which focused on classical biomarkers including: atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP), C-reactive protein (CRP), aldosterone, and melatonin. Five were 'Nocturomics', including one that assessed the microbiome and identified 27 faecal and eight urinary bacteria correlated with nocturia; and four studies that identified candidate metabolomic biomarkers, including fatty acid metabolites, serotonin, glycerol, lauric acid, thiaproline, and imidazolelactic acid among others. To date, no biomarker is recommended in clinical practice. Nocturomics are in an embryonic phase of conception but are developing quickly. Although candidate biomarkers are being identified, none of them are yet validated on a large sample, although some preclinical studies have shown a probable role of fatty acid metabolites as a possible biomarker of circadian rhythm and chronotherapy.

Further research is needed to validate biomarkers for nocturia within the framework of a diagnostic and therapeutic precision medicine perspective. We hope this study provides a summary of the current biomarker discoveries associated with nocturia and details future prospects for omics-driven biomarkers.

BJU international. 2023 Feb 06 [Epub]

Susan Gong, George Bou Kheir, Abdo Kabarriti, Lakshay Khosla, Fred Gong, Erik Van Laecke, Jeffrey Weiss, Karel Everaert, François Hervé

Department of Urology, SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University, Brooklyn, NY, USA., Department of Urology, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium.