Search Guide for Biomedical Literature
How Search Works
LitView search goes beyond simple keyword matching. It understands the different parts of your query — biomedical topics, authors, journals, institutions, diseases, treatments, clinical terms, and research methods — and finds papers that match the relationships between them.
This means you can search the way you think, combining different types of biomedical information in a single query.
Quick Start
| Query | What it finds |
|---|---|
CRISPR | Papers about CRISPR and gene editing |
heart failure | Papers about heart failure |
cancer immunotherapy since 2020 | Recent papers on cancer immunotherapy published from 2020 onward |
papers by Jennifer Doudna on CRISPR | CRISPR papers authored by Jennifer Doudna |
"cystic fibrosis" gene therapy | Papers that exactly match cystic fibrosis and relate to gene therapy |
What You Can Search For
Biomedical Topics and Keywords

Search for biomedical research topics, diseases, treatments, biological mechanisms, or technical terms. The search handles both broad topics and specific terminology.
Examples:
drug discoverycancer immunotherapyorganoid technologygene therapystem cell differentiationantimicrobial resistanceneuroinflammationbiomarkers for Alzheimer's disease
Medical and Clinical Terms
Recognised medical and clinical terms are matched against standard medical vocabularies, helping return more targeted results than general keyword search.
Examples:
heart failuretype 2 diabetesrheumatoid arthritisglioblastomachronic kidney diseasemajor depressive disordertriple negative breast cancer
Authors
Search for researchers by name. You can mention them naturally or use quotes for an exact name match.
Examples:
papers by Jennifer Doudnapapers by Katalin Karikó on mRNA vaccines"christopher haggarty-weir" malaria
Quotes are useful for uncommon, hyphenated, or multi-part names.
Journals
Find papers published in a specific biomedical or scientific journal.
Examples:
Nature MedicineThe LancetNew England Journal of MedicineCellBMJJAMAPLOS Biology
Institutions
Search for work from a particular university, hospital, research institute, or organisation.
Examples:
University of OxfordMayo ClinicWalter and Eliza Hall InstituteBroad InstituteUniversity of MelbourneNIH
Combining Search Terms
You can mix and match different types of biomedical information in one query. LitView will look for papers at the intersection of those concepts.
| Query | What it finds |
|---|---|
machine learning for drug discovery | Papers applying machine learning methods to biomedical drug discovery |
organoid models for colorectal cancer | Papers about organoid models used in colorectal cancer research |
CRISPR gene therapy sickle cell disease | Papers connecting CRISPR, gene therapy, and sickle cell disease |
papers by Katalin Karikó on mRNA vaccines | mRNA vaccine papers authored by Katalin Karikó |
"christopher haggarty-weir" malaria | Malaria research by a specific author |
immunotherapy biomarkers melanoma | Papers about biomarkers for immunotherapy response in melanoma |
You do not need special syntax to combine terms. Describe what you are looking for and the search will interpret the relationships between the terms.
Excluding Terms
Use not to remove unwanted results.
Examples:
CRISPR not review articles— CRISPR research excluding review paperscancer immunotherapy not melanoma— cancer immunotherapy papers excluding melanoma-focused resultsdiabetes biomarkers not type 1 diabetes— diabetes biomarker papers excluding type 1 diabetesAlzheimer's disease not animal models— Alzheimer’s disease papers excluding animal model studies
Place not before the term or phrase you want to exclude.
Exact Matching with Quotes
By default, search terms are matched flexibly. LitView may find related variations, synonyms, and close matches. Wrapping a term in quotes switches to exact matching, which is useful when you need precision.
| Query | How it matches |
|---|---|
CRISPR gene therapy | Flexible match on both terms |
"CRISPR" gene therapy | Exact match on CRISPR, flexible match on gene therapy |
"triple negative breast cancer" immunotherapy | Exact match on the cancer type, flexible match on immunotherapy |
"cystic fibrosis" gene therapy | Exact match on cystic fibrosis, flexible match on gene therapy |
"christopher haggarty-weir" malaria | Exact match on the author name, flexible match on malaria |
When to use quotes:
- Uncommon or hyphenated author names
- Specific disease names
- Specific biomedical terms you do not want broadened
- When flexible matching returns too many loosely related results
Filtering by Year
Add a time period to any search using natural language.
| Syntax | Example |
|---|---|
| Since a year | cancer immunotherapy since 2020 |
| Year range | organoid models from 2018 to 2023 |
| Relative | CRISPR gene therapy last 5 years |
These can be combined with any other search terms. Other supported phrases include past 3 years and recent 2 years.
Sidebar Filters
In addition to your search query, you can use sidebar filters to narrow your results by:
- Publication year — set a start and/or end year
- Work type — article, preprint, review, book, book chapter, dataset, dissertation, editorial, letter, report, and more
- Open access status — gold, green, hybrid, bronze, diamond, or closed
- Minimum citation count — only show papers with at least a certain number of citations
Sidebar filters work alongside your search query. For example, you could search for cancer immunotherapy biomarkers and then filter to open-access articles from the last three years.
Tips for Better Results
- Start broad, then narrow. Begin with a biomedical topic, then add disease areas, treatments, authors, year filters, or quotes.
- Use quotes for precise disease names. For example,
"triple negative breast cancer"or"cystic fibrosis". - Combine an author with a topic to find their specific work in an area, such as
papers by Jennifer Doudna on CRISPR. - Use
notto remove noise. For example,Alzheimer's disease not animal models. - Use clinical terms naturally. Medical terms are recognised automatically, so you can type conditions, treatments, and disease names directly.
- Add a year filter when the field changes quickly. For fast-moving areas such as immunotherapy, mRNA vaccines, or CRISPR therapy, try terms like
since 2020orlast 5 years.
Example Queries

| Query | What it finds |
|---|---|
CRISPR | Seminal and recent papers about CRISPR and gene editing |
heart failure | Papers tagged with the medical term heart failure |
cancer immunotherapy since 2020 | Recent cancer immunotherapy research from 2020 onward |
organoid technology cancer | Papers about organoid technology in cancer research |
drug discovery Alzheimer's disease | Papers connecting drug discovery and Alzheimer’s disease |
biomarkers for Parkinson's disease | Papers about biomarkers in Parkinson’s disease |
CRISPR not review articles | CRISPR research excluding review papers |
"CRISPR" gene therapy | Exact CRISPR match combined with gene therapy |
"triple negative breast cancer" immunotherapy | Papers on immunotherapy for triple negative breast cancer |
"christopher haggarty-weir" malaria | Malaria research by a specific author |
papers by Jennifer Doudna on CRISPR | CRISPR-related papers authored by Jennifer Doudna |
organoid models from 2018 to 2023 | Organoid model research within a specific year range |
mRNA vaccines last 5 years | Recent papers on mRNA vaccines |