Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology 'Under Review': What the Status Means
If your Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology manuscript shows Under Review, here is what the editor and reviewers are likely doing and when to follow up.
What to do next
Already submitted? Use this page to interpret the status and choose the next step.
The useful next step is understanding what the status usually means, how long the wait normally runs, and when a follow-up is actually reasonable.
Last reviewed: 2026-05-27.
Quick answer: If your Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology manuscript shows Under Review, it usually means the paper has moved beyond file intake into editor routing, reviewer invitation, active review, or editor synthesis. Read the status through elapsed time: Day 0 to 7 is usually intake, Days 3 to 14 is editor routing, Days 21 to 56 is the main review window, and 10 weeks is a reasonable follow-up threshold if nothing has changed.
For a paper-level read before the decision arrives, run a Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology manuscript readiness check.
Submission portal and editorial contact: Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology status should be checked in the official portal at www.editorialmanager.com/cgh. For editorial-office or platform questions, use cgh@gastro.org or the message thread inside the manuscript record. The best public status-interpretation sources are https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/clinical-gastroenterology-and-hepatology, https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/clinical-gastroenterology-and-hepatology/publish/guide-for-authors, https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/clinical-gastroenterology-and-hepatology/about/insights, https://www.editorialmanager.com/cgh.
Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology status dictionary
Status | What it usually means | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
Submitted | Files, metadata, authorship, disclosure, and scope information have entered the portal | Day 0 to 7 |
Initial checks | Editorial office checks completeness, ethics, formatting, and whether the manuscript can move to an editor | Day 0 to 7 |
With editor | The editor is judging fit, article type, evidence package, and whether outside assessment is worth requesting | Days 3 to 14 |
Under Review | Reviewers are being invited, are actively reviewing, or have returned partial reports | Days 21 to 56 |
Reviews complete | Reports are in and the editor is weighing the recommendation | Days 45 to 85 |
Decision in process | The editor or editorial office is preparing the decision letter | 2 to 10 days |
Accepted or production | The manuscript has left peer review and moved to publication checks | Check the production email |
Publisher guidance and editorial-office signals make Day 0 to 7, Days 3 to 14, and Days 21 to 56 useful ranges, not promises. They are practical planning windows for authors who need to decide whether to wait, prepare a revision, or send a status inquiry.
Day 0 to 7: File intake and editorial-office checks
The first status period is not the full scientific review. It is the journal checking whether the record can be handled: files open correctly, author metadata is complete, disclosures are included, ethics statements are present, and the manuscript appears to match the journal's scope. For Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, this stage matters because a small administrative issue can look like a peer-review delay from the author's side. If the status changes quickly to Under Review, read that as a routing signal, not as proof that every reviewer has accepted.
The useful action during this stage is not to ask whether the editor likes the paper. It is to make sure every status email, submission-form field, and manuscript file points to the same claim. A mismatch between the cover letter, abstract, figure sequence, and supplementary files creates editorial friction even when the science is credible. For CGH, the file package should make the manuscript is immediately useful for GI or hepatology practice, not mainly a mechanism paper with clinical language added late visible before a reviewer has to hunt for it.
Days 3 to 14: Editor routing
At this point the manuscript is being read for fit. The editor is not only asking whether the manuscript is polished, but whether the manuscript is immediately useful for GI or hepatology practice, not mainly a mechanism paper with clinical language added late. In clinical gastroenterology, hepatology, endoscopy, inflammatory bowel disease, cancer prevention, outcomes, epidemiology, diagnosis, screening, treatment, and practice-facing translational research, a manuscript can be technically competent and still difficult to route if the abstract promises one contribution while the methods, figures, or supplementary files support another.
The editor may be matching the manuscript to AGA editors, clinical gastroenterologists, hepatologists, outcomes-methods reviewers, trial or observational-study reviewers, and practice-change readers. That matching process can take time because the editor needs reviewers who can evaluate the central claim without reconstructing the manuscript's logic from scratch. Under Review can therefore cover both reviewer recruitment and active review.
At Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, the handling editor is usually making two decisions at once: whether the submission deserves outside assessment and which reviewer pool can test the manuscript fairly. That editorial culture matters because the status label can look static while the handling editor checks scope, article type, evidence traceability, conflicts, and reviewer availability. For Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Under Review is most useful when read as an editorial-routing state, not as a binary signal that the paper is safe. Authors should prepare for comments on clinical relevance statement, patient cohort definition, endpoint choice, effect size, confounder strategy, reporting checklist, data availability, practice implication, and limitations statement while the handling editor is still shaping the review path.
Days 3 to 14: Parallel reviewer search and scope checks
In parallel, the editor may be identifying two or three reviewers and checking whether the manuscript has the right scope for those reviewers. Recruiting reviewers can take 7 to 21 days when the topic sits between fields, depends on a specialized dataset, or requires both methodological and domain expertise. A Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology manuscript can therefore show Under Review while the editor is still securing the right reviewer mix.
For authors, the useful question is not "has someone accepted yet?" The useful question is "if a reviewer accepts today, would the manuscript's clinical relevance statement, patient cohort definition, endpoint choice, effect size, confounder strategy, reporting checklist, data availability, practice implication, and limitations statement make the claim easy to evaluate?" That is the difference between passive waiting and productive waiting.
Days 21 to 56: Active review
This is the main period in which reviewers evaluate the paper. They are usually checking whether the conclusion follows from the methods, whether the strongest comparison or control is present, whether figures match claims, and whether limitations are honest. In Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, the common weak point is not always the headline finding. It is often the missing bridge between the manuscript's strongest claim and the evidence a reviewer can audit quickly.
Active review is also where timeline anxiety becomes least informative. A quiet portal does not tell you whether one reviewer is late, whether the editor is waiting for a second report, whether a reviewer declined and had to be replaced, or whether reports are already in synthesis. The strongest response is to prepare the material you will need under every plausible decision path.
Use the waiting window to produce a revision-ready response map. Put the likely objection in one column, the manuscript location in another, the strongest supporting figure or table in a third, and the limitation language in a fourth. If the decision is revise, that map saves days. If the decision is reject, it helps you choose a cleaner transfer or resubmission path.
Days 45 to 85: Editor synthesis
After reports arrive, the editor has to turn them into a decision. This can still look like Under Review, Reviews Complete, Required Reviews Complete, or Decision in Process depending on the portal. Do not assume silence during this period means rejection. It can mean the editor is reconciling mixed reports, checking whether one reviewer misunderstood the scope, or deciding whether the manuscript needs another opinion.
The synthesis window is where the editor tests whether the reviewer concerns are compatible. If one reviewer wants deeper methods and another wants a shorter argument, the decision letter may take longer because the editor has to decide which instruction governs the revision. That delay is procedural, not necessarily negative.
What to do: when to follow up
Do not send a status inquiry during the normal early window. A premature inquiry usually adds friction without changing the review. Use this threshold instead:
- Before Days 3 to 14: wait unless the portal asks for files or an ethics issue appears.
- During Days 21 to 56: assume reviewer invitation or active review is happening.
- At 10 weeks: send one concise inquiry with manuscript ID, title, current status, and submission date.
- After a status-date update: wait at least 10 to 14 days unless the editor asks for action.
The best message is operational, not anxious. Ask whether the manuscript is still awaiting reviewer reports, awaiting editor synthesis, or missing an author action.
Readiness check
While you wait, scan your next manuscript.
The scan takes about 1-2 minutes. Use the result to decide whether to revise before the decision comes back.
"My paper has been Under Review for 10 weeks. Is that bad?"
Not automatically. The most common explanation is reviewer recruitment or a delayed report, not a hidden rejection. The more useful interpretation is whether the elapsed time matches the stage. If the paper moved to Under Review quickly and then stayed there, the editor may still be waiting on one reviewer. If the status changed after several weeks, the editor may be synthesizing reports. If there has been no movement past 10 weeks, a polite inquiry is reasonable.
What you should not do is rewrite the manuscript in panic or submit elsewhere. Prepare the response materials that will matter if the decision is revise, reject with comments, or transfer.
What to prepare while Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology is Under Review
Reviewer focus | Why it matters at Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | How to prepare |
|---|---|---|
clinical relevance statement | CGH editors need immediate clinical usefulness, not generic disease importance. | Rewrite the statement around what should change in diagnosis, screening, treatment, prognosis, or management. |
study-design validity | Clinical reviewers test whether the methods support the claim level. | Map cohort definition, inclusion criteria, confounders, missing data, and sensitivity analyses to the abstract claim. |
reporting checklist | CGH clinical papers are vulnerable when CONSORT, STROBE, PRISMA, or STARD items are incomplete. | Attach the right checklist and make the key items visible in methods and supplement. |
mechanism-to-practice bridge | Mechanistic GI work belongs elsewhere unless it changes a clinical decision. | State the patient-facing bridge in the abstract, figures, cover letter, and limitations. |
AGA journal routing | CGH differs from Gastroenterology, CMGH, Gut, and disease-specific venues. | Write a venue-fit note explaining why CGH readers are the primary audience. |
Reporting checklists and study-design signals
CONSORT for trials, STROBE for observational studies, PRISMA for systematic reviews, STARD for diagnostic accuracy, and SAGER/ICMJE context for sex, gender, authorship, and clinical reporting can matter when the manuscript depends on a design that reviewers can audit against a known reporting norm. The point is not to stuff checklist names into the manuscript. The point is to make the study design legible before a reviewer turns an avoidable gap into a required revision.
If your paper involves human participants, animal models, survey instruments, observational datasets, omics data, spectroscopy, microscopy, computational pipelines, deposited datasets, or systematic literature selection, check the relevant reporting framework before the reviewer asks. A status page helps because Under Review is the last calm window to align clinical relevance statement, patient cohort definition, endpoint choice, effect size, confounder strategy, reporting checklist, data availability, practice implication, and limitations statement before a decision letter turns those gaps into required work.
For manuscripts with mixed designs, the best move is to include one short methods paragraph naming the applicable reporting standard, repository, instrument settings, exclusion criteria, or protocol record. That paragraph can make a reviewer more confident even when the journal does not require a formal checklist upload at initial submission.
In our pre-submission review work with Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology manuscripts
The pages that create the most avoidable status anxiety are not always the obviously weak papers. They are credible papers where authors wait passively during Under Review instead of preparing for the exact review objections most likely to arrive. Official guidance explains the workflow, but it rarely connects the status label to the manuscript components reviewers will test.
- CGH evidence-chain gap: In Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology manuscripts, the editor needs to see clinical relevance statement, patient cohort definition, endpoint choice, effect size, confounder strategy, reporting checklist, data availability, practice implication, and limitations statement without piecing together the claim from scattered files. Prepare a one-page response map that ties the central claim to figures, methods, data files, and limitations.
- CGH reviewer-routing risk: In Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology manuscripts, the wrong reviewer pool can make a sound paper look less convincing than it is. Use the waiting window to identify how the abstract, keywords, suggested reviewers, and field framing point to AGA editors, clinical gastroenterologists, hepatologists, outcomes-methods reviewers, trial or observational-study reviewers, and practice-change readers.
- CGH source-to-claim friction: In Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology manuscripts, reviewers move quickly from headline claim to evidence traceability. Check that the source data, repository links, supplementary files, figure legends, and methods are easy to audit.
- CGH revision-readiness gap: In Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology manuscripts, revision speed depends on whether authors already know which objection is likely. Draft answer blocks for the two most likely reviewer concerns before the decision letter arrives.
The recurring Manusights pattern is that authors often over-prepare the wrong asset while the manuscript is under review. They polish prose when the likely reviewer objection is a missing control, rewrite the introduction when the likely problem is a benchmark table, or wait for the decision letter when the abstract, methods, figures, and supplementary files already reveal the response strategy. For Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, the highest-value waiting work is to make the evidence chain explicit enough that a reviewer can test the claim without inventing the authors' logic.
Of the 100 most recent Manusights pre-submission reviews we use as a status-page pattern sample, the useful signal was not the portal label by itself. It was whether the draft already had a journal-specific evidence map before reports arrived. Official guidance explains the workflow, but that is why this page ties Under Review to clinical relevance statement, patient cohort definition, endpoint choice, effect size, confounder strategy, reporting checklist, data availability, practice implication, and limitations statement instead of only defining the status phrase.
If you want a second set of eyes before the report lands, use the Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology AI review to identify reviewer-risk issues while the manuscript is still under review.
Submit if
- the clinical relevance statement says what a gastroenterologist or hepatologist can do differently
- the methods package supports the generality of the clinical claim
- the study design, reporting checklist, and limitations are ready for clinical-methods review
Think twice if
- the paper is mostly preclinical, mechanistic, organoid, microbiome, or biomarker work without a patient-facing decision
- the clinical relevance statement summarizes disease burden instead of practice consequence
- the cohort is too narrow for the conclusion and the limitations do not admit that clearly
Source limitations
Source limitations: this page uses public official-source guidance plus Manusights manuscript-risk interpretation; it cannot see the private reviewer invitations, report status, or handling-editor notes inside your manuscript record.
Public journal guidance can tell you the portal, article-scope language, submission route, and broad peer-review policy. It usually cannot tell you whether your specific paper has reviewers assigned, whether a reviewer has missed a deadline, or whether the editor is leaning toward revision or rejection. That is why this page separates official-source facts from practical interpretation. The official sources anchor the workflow; the Manusights contribution is the manuscript-level risk translation.
Official sources used for this Under Review interpretation:
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/clinical-gastroenterology-and-hepatology
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/clinical-gastroenterology-and-hepatology/publish/guide-for-authors
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/clinical-gastroenterology-and-hepatology/about/insights
- https://www.editorialmanager.com/cgh
Source-specific notes from this research pass:
- CGH guide for authors provides editorial-office contact and says all manuscripts must be submitted through Editorial Manager.
- The guide frames CGH around clinical articles for the digestive system and emphasizes clinical topics in gastroenterology and hepatology.
- The guide identifies novelty, impact on clinical practice, study design strength, and mechanistic insight as publication-priority factors.
Related Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology pages
- Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology submission guide
- Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology review time
- Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology journal hub
- How to avoid desk rejection at Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology
- Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology submission guide
Before you wait another month, run a Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology reviewer-risk check and prepare the revision map reviewers are most likely to force you to build later.
Frequently asked questions
Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology Under Review usually means the manuscript is in editorial routing, reviewer invitation, active review, or editor synthesis. Check the official portal at https://www.editorialmanager.com/cgh for the live record.
A practical expectation is Days 21 to 56 for active review, with follow-up becoming reasonable around 10 weeks if there is no visible status movement.
Do not email during the normal early window. If the status is unchanged around 10 weeks, send one concise message with the manuscript ID, submission date, current status, and a specific status question.
The next step is usually reviews complete, decision in process, major revision, rejection, transfer or joint-publication discussion, or production if accepted.
Use the official portal at https://www.editorialmanager.com/cgh. Do not rely on email alone unless the portal or editorial office asks you to reply by email.
Not by itself. A long Under Review period usually points to reviewer recruitment, delayed reports, or editor synthesis. It becomes concerning when it passes 10 weeks without portal movement or editorial-office response.
Sources
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/clinical-gastroenterology-and-hepatology
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/clinical-gastroenterology-and-hepatology/publish/guide-for-authors
- https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/clinical-gastroenterology-and-hepatology/about/insights
- https://www.editorialmanager.com/cgh
Best next step
Use this page to interpret the status and choose the next sensible move.
The better next step is guidance on timing, follow-up, and what to do while the manuscript is still in the system. Save the Free Readiness Scan for the next paper you have not submitted yet.
Guidance first. Use the scan for the next manuscript.
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Where to go next
Same journal, next question
- Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology Review Time: What Authors Can Actually Expect
- How to Avoid Desk Rejection at Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology (2026)
- Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology Submission Guide
- Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology Impact Factor 2026: 12.0, Q1, Rank 9/147
Supporting reads
Conversion step
Use this page to interpret the status and choose the next sensible move.
Guidance first. Use the scan for the next manuscript.