Identification of serum microRNA profiles in colon cancer

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Abstract

Background: microRNAs (miRNAs) exist in blood in an apparently stable form. We have explored whether serum miRNAs can be used as non-invasive early biomarkers of colon cancer.Methods:Serum samples from 30 patients with colon cancer stage IV and 10 healthy controls were examined for the expression of 375 cancer-relevant miRNAs. Based on the miRNA profile in this study, 34 selected miRNAs were measured in serum from 40 patients with stage I-II colon cancer and from 10 additional controls.Results:Twenty miRNAs were differentially expressed in serum from stage IV patients compared with controls (P<0.01). Unsupervised clustering revealed four subgroups; one corresponding mostly to the control group and the three others to the patient groups. Of the 34 miRNAs measured in the follow-up study of stage I-II patients, 21 showed concordant expression between stage IV and stage I-II patient. Based on the profiles of these 21 miRNAs, a supervised linear regression analysis (Partial Least Squares Regression) was performed. Using this model we correctly assigned stage I-II colon cancer patients based on miRNA profiles of stage IV patients.Conclusion: Serum miRNA expression profiling may be utilised in early detection of colon cancer. © 2013 Cancer Research UK. All rights reserved.

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Hofsli, E., Sjursen, W., Prestvik, W. S., Johansen, J., Rye, M., Tranø, G., … Thommesen, L. (2013). Identification of serum microRNA profiles in colon cancer. British Journal of Cancer, 108(8), 1712–1719. https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2013.121

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