A new kid in town: Cardiovascular Diabetology - Endocrinology Reports

We’d like to introduce Cardiovascular Diabetology’s new open access companion journal Cardiovascular Diabetology - Endocrinology Reports
A new kid in town: Cardiovascular Diabetology - Endocrinology Reports
Like

Share this post

Choose a social network to share with, or copy the URL to share elsewhere

This is a representation of how your post may appear on social media. The actual post will vary between social networks

It is our pleasure and honor to introduce the open access journal Cardiovascular Diabetology - Endocrinology Reports.  

Cardiovascular Diabetology - Endocrinology Reports welcomes submissions on all aspects of diabetes and endocrinology, as well as providing a forum for those studies that highlight the intersections with cardiovascular and metabolic health.  We envision this journal as a forum for high-quality, evidence-based contributions on pathophysiology, diagnostics and therapeutic innovations, that will advance scientific understanding and clinical practice. Our aim is to publish:

  •  Cutting-edge research (both preclinical and clinical) exploring the mechanisms underlying shared disease pathways.
  • Clinical studies that evaluate novel interventions, especially those targeting multiple systems.
  • Review articles synthesizing the latest knowledge on topics such as the role of inflammation, oxidative stress, and metabolic dysregulation.
  • Perspectives and editorials that stimulate critical thinking and debate on emerging issues.

 We encourage contributors to push boundaries, propose innovative hypotheses, and share translational insights that can directly impact patient outcomes.

The editors of Cardiovascular Diabetology and the companion journal Cardiovascular Diabetology - Endocrinology Reports are committed to working collaboratively, ensuring that each maintains its distinct focus while fostering synergy.

Cardiovascular Diabetology - Endocrinology Reports has a broader scope than Cardiovascular Diabetology. While Cardiovascular Diabetology only publishes content dedicated to the intersection of diabetes and cardiovascular diseases, Cardiovascular Diabetology - Endocrinology Reports welcomes submissions on all aspects of diabetes and endocrinology.

If you are interested in joining Cardiovascular Diabetology - Endocrinology Reports,  please contact me at victoria.hentschke@springernature.com

Please sign in or register for FREE

If you are a registered user on Research Communities by Springer Nature, please sign in

Follow the Topic

Diabetes
Life Sciences > Health Sciences > Clinical Medicine > Diseases > Diabetes
Endocrinology
Life Sciences > Health Sciences > Clinical Medicine > Endocrinology
Endocrine System
Life Sciences > Biological Sciences > Anatomy > Endocrine System

Related Collections

With Collections, you can get published faster and increase your visibility.

Pleiotropic Actions of Incretin-Based Therapies

Cardiovascular Diabetology - Endocrinology Reports features a Collection on "Pleiotropic Actions of Incretin-Based Therapies". This is a companion Collection with Cardiovascular Diabetology with the title "Incretin-Based Therapies in Type 2 Diabetes and Obesity: Current Evidence and the Evolving Cardiometabolic Landscape".

Incretins play a crucial role in regulating glucose homeostasis and body energetics, and incretin based-therapies have fundamentally changed the management of people with diabetes and obesity. Importantly, recent evidence has revealed a wider profile of multi-organ beneficial effects for incretin therapies, including cardiovascular and renal protection, beyond glycaemic control. Whilst the full range of pleiotropic, organ-specific effects of incretins is still being elucidated, it should be noted that their use is limited by adverse events, such as gastrointestinal intolerance, and safety concerns regarding retinal disorders, muscle impairment, and pancreatitis.

Ongoing areas of interest include, but are not limited to:

  • Tissue-specific effects of incretin-based medications
  • Exploration of novel clinical indications for incretin therapies
  • Safety concerns related to incretin therapies
  • Next-generation incretin medications
  • Combination of incretin treatment with lifestyle interventions

This Collection invites mini reviews, short reports and commentaries of clinical studies related to the pleiotropic effects of incretin-based therapies, but also welcomes original clinical, translation and basic research articles and reviews.

This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 3, Good Health and Well-Being.

All submissions in this Collection undergo the journal’s standard peer review process. Similarly, all manuscripts authored by a Guest Editor(s) will be handled by the Editor-in-Chief. As an open access publication, this journal levies an article processing fee (details here). We recognize that many key stakeholders may not have access to such resources and are committed to supporting participation in this issue wherever resources are a barrier. For more information about what support may be available, please visit OA funding and support, or email OAfundingpolicy@springernature.com or the Editor-in-Chief.

Publishing Model: Open Access

Deadline: Jan 14, 2027

Endocrine Drivers and Clinical Implications of the Cardiovascular–Kidney–Metabolic Syndrome

Cardiovascular Diabetology - Endrocrinology Reports features a Collection on "Endocrine Drivers and Clinical Implications of the Cardiovascular–Kidney–Metabolic Syndrome". This is a companion Collection with Cardiovascular Diabetology with the title "Cardiovascular-Kidney-Metabolic (CKM) Syndrome: Risk Stratification, Prognostic Implications and Therapeutic Innovation" and with BMC Cardiovascular Disorders with the title "Cardiovascular-Kidney-Metabolic (CKM) Syndrome: diagnosis and management of a systemic disorder".

This Collection explores the endocrine dimensions of the cardiovascular–kidney–metabolic (CKM) syndrome and related disorders. CKM syndrome reflects the complex, multidirectional interactions among excess adiposity, metabolic dysfunction, endocrine abnormalities, chronic kidney disease, and cardiovascular injury. Given the endocrine system’s central role in metabolic and cardiovascular homeostasis, a deeper mechanistic and clinical understanding of endocrine factors — ranging from thyroid, adrenal, and pituitary function to bone metabolism, reproductive endocrinology, and neuroendocrine signaling — is important for advancing integrated risk stratification and therapeutic innovation across the CKM spectrum.

Possible topics of interest include:

  • Endocrine determinants and modulators of CKM risk, including thyroid, adrenal, pituitary, reproductive, bone, and neuroendocrine disorders
  • Life-course endocrine influences, such as childhood obesity, pubertal development, gestational diabetes, and pregnancy-associated endocrine conditions
  • Biomarkers and diagnostic tools for early detection of multiorgan dysfunction across CKM stages, including endocrine-specific laboratory markers and advanced imaging
  • Non-pharmacological multi-target interventions, including nutritional, behavioral, and exercise-based strategies, with emphasis on endocrine-metabolic mechanisms
  • Emerging pharmacotherapies, including SGLT2 inhibitors, GLP-1 receptor agonists, non-steroidal MRAs, incretin combinations, anti-inflammatory agents, and endocrine-targeted therapies
  • Translational and basic science investigations into hormonal signaling pathways linking endocrine disorders with cardiovascular and renal dysfunction

This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 3, Good Health and Wellbeing.

All submissions in this Collection undergo the journal’s standard peer review process. Similarly, all manuscripts authored by a Guest Editor(s) will be handled by the Editor-in-Chief. As an open access publication, this journal levies an article processing fee (details here). We recognize that many key stakeholders may not have access to such resources and are committed to supporting participation in this issue wherever resources are a barrier. For more information about what support may be available, please visit OA funding and support, or email OAfundingpolicy@springernature.com or the Editor-in-Chief.

Publishing Model: Open Access

Deadline: Feb 18, 2027