» Articles » PMID: 33622375

A Preliminary Study of Micro-RNAs As Minimally Invasive Biomarkers for the Diagnosis of Prostate Cancer Patients

Overview
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Oncology
Date 2021 Feb 24
PMID 33622375
Citations 15
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: A prostate cancer diagnosis is based on biopsy sampling that is an invasive, expensive procedure, and doesn't accurately represent multifocal disease.

Methods: To establish a model using plasma miRs to distinguish Prostate cancer patients from non-cancer controls, we enrolled 600 patients histologically diagnosed as having or not prostate cancer at biopsy. Two hundred ninety patients were eligible for the analysis. Samples were randomly divided into discovery and validation cohorts.

Results: NGS-miR-expression profiling revealed a miRs signature able to distinguish prostate cancer from non-cancer plasma samples. Of 51 miRs selected in the discovery cohort, we successfully validated 5 miRs (4732-3p, 98-5p, let-7a-5p, 26b-5p, and 21-5p) deregulated in prostate cancer samples compared to controls (p ≤ 0.05). Multivariate and ROC analyses show miR-26b-5p as a strong predictor of PCa, with an AUC of 0.89 (CI = 0.83-0.95;p < 0.001). Combining miRs 26b-5p and 98-5p, we developed a model that has the best predictive power in discriminating prostate cancer from non-cancer (AUC = 0.94; CI: 0,835-0,954). To distinguish between low and high-grade prostate cancer, we found that miR-4732-3p levels were significantly higher; instead, miR-26b-5p and miR-98-5p levels were lower in low-grade compared to the high-grade group (p ≤ 0.05). Combining miR-26b-5p and miR-4732-3p we have the highest diagnostic accuracy for high-grade prostate cancer patients, (AUC = 0.80; CI 0,69-0,873).

Conclusions: Noninvasive diagnostic tests may reduce the number of unnecessary prostate biopsies. The 2-miRs-diagnostic model (miR-26b-5p and miR-98-5p) and the 2-miRs-grade model (miR-26b-5p and miR-4732-3p) are promising minimally invasive tools in prostate cancer clinical management.

Citing Articles

tRNA, yRNA, and rRNA fragment excisions do not involve canonical microRNA biogenesis machinery.

Godang N, Nguyen A, DeMeis J, Paudel S, Campbell N, Barnes K MicroPubl Biol. 2024; 2024.

PMID: 39634108 PMC: 11615671. DOI: 10.17912/micropub.biology.001332.


Insight into the Role of the miR-584 Family in Human Cancers.

Braile M, Luciano N, Carlomagno D, Salvatore G, Orlandella F Int J Mol Sci. 2024; 25(13).

PMID: 39000555 PMC: 11242779. DOI: 10.3390/ijms25137448.


MicroRNA-98: the multifaceted regulator in human cancer progression and therapy.

Hazari V, Samali S, Izadpanahi P, Mollaei H, Sadri F, Rezaei Z Cancer Cell Int. 2024; 24(1):209.

PMID: 38872210 PMC: 11177407. DOI: 10.1186/s12935-024-03386-2.


Differential Expression of miRNAs Contributes to Tumor Aggressiveness and Racial Disparity in African American Men with Prostate Cancer.

Ottman R, Ganapathy K, Lin H, Osterman C, Dutil J, Matta J Cancers (Basel). 2023; 15(8).

PMID: 37190259 PMC: 10136561. DOI: 10.3390/cancers15082331.


Diagnosis of Prostate Cancer through the Multi-Ligand Binding of Prostate-Derived Extracellular Vesicles and miRNA Analysis.

Zabegina L, Zyatchin I, Kniazeva M, Shalaev A, Berkut M, Sharoyko V Life (Basel). 2023; 13(4).

PMID: 37109414 PMC: 10141197. DOI: 10.3390/life13040885.


References
1.
Weber J, Baxter D, Zhang S, Huang D, Huang K, Lee M . The microRNA spectrum in 12 body fluids. Clin Chem. 2010; 56(11):1733-41. PMC: 4846276. DOI: 10.1373/clinchem.2010.147405. View

2.
Venderink W, Bomers J, Overduin C, Padhani A, de Lauw G, Sedelaar M . Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging for the Detection of Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer: What Urologists Need to Know. Part 3: Targeted Biopsy. Eur Urol. 2019; 77(4):481-490. DOI: 10.1016/j.eururo.2019.10.009. View

3.
Ni R, Huang Y, Wang J . miR-98 targets ITGB3 to inhibit proliferation, migration, and invasion of non-small-cell lung cancer. Onco Targets Ther. 2015; 8:2689-97. PMC: 4590683. DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S90998. View

4.
McDonald A, Vira M, Shen J, Sanda M, Raman J, Liao J . Circulating microRNAs in plasma as potential biomarkers for the early detection of prostate cancer. Prostate. 2018; 78(6):411-418. DOI: 10.1002/pros.23485. View

5.
Cooperberg M, Broering J, Carroll P . Risk assessment for prostate cancer metastasis and mortality at the time of diagnosis. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2009; 101(12):878-87. PMC: 2697208. DOI: 10.1093/jnci/djp122. View