What does 'peer-reviewed' mean and why does it matter for OncuraKit?
A peer-reviewed study is one that has been submitted to a scientific journal and evaluated by independent experts in the same field before publication. Reviewers assess whether the methodology is sound, the data supports the conclusions, and the work adds meaningfully to the scientific literature. Peer review is the gold standard of scientific evidence. The four published studies supporting the Yenos/OncuraKit platform — spanning 2020 to 2025 — were all peer-reviewed and published in indexed scientific journals (Scientific Reports, Non-Coding RNA, Int. J. Mol. Sci., and bioRxiv for the preprint). This distinguishes OncuraKit from purely commercial tests that cite only internal unpublished validation data.
Answered by OncuraKit Medical Team·Validated against Yenos Analytical published research·Source studies