Pri-miR526b and Pri-miR655 Are Potential Blood Biomarkers for Breast Cancer
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design, Patient Demography, and Study Subjects
2.2. Clinical Sample Preparation and Storage
2.3. RNA Extraction and cDNA Synthesis
2.4. Quantitative Real-Time PCR (qRT-PCR)
2.5. Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) Curve
2.6. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Clinicopathological Characteristics of Benign and Breast Cancer Patients
3.2. Levels of miRNA and Pri-miRNA Expressions Are Comparable in Breast Cancer
3.3. Pri-miR526b and Pri-miR655 Expression in Various Tumor Stages of Plasma Samples
3.4. Diagnostic Performance of Plasma Pri-mir526b and Pri-mir655 in Early Detection of BC
3.5. High Pri-miRNA Expression in Stratified Tumor Samples
3.6. Pri-miRNA as a Risk Factor for Breast Cancer
3.7. Validation of Pri-miRNA Expression in OICR Samples
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sample No. | Pathology | Histopathological Details | Age | Diagnosed with Cancer after Specimen Collection |
---|---|---|---|---|
C1 | Benign | Atypical ductal hyperplasia within a complex, sclerosed papilloma; fibroadenoma | 59 | No |
C2 | Benign | Fibrosis intermixed with foamy macrophages and numerous stromal microcalcifications, suggestive of healing fat necrosis | 90 | No |
C3 | Benign | Benign phyllodes tumor | 51 | No |
C4 | Benign | The lesion is a benign fibroadenoma, but the patient has a recent history of breast cancer within the past 6 months; undergoing adjuvant treatment at the time of this biopsy | 55 | No |
C5 | Benign | Fibroadenoma with focal with florid ductal hyperplasia | 52 | No |
C6 | Benign | Focal cyst rupture, with associated chronic inflammation, fibrosis, collections of foamy histiocytes, and multinucleated giant cell reaction | 59 | Yes, in 2018 |
C7 | Benign | Papillary lesion without atypia | 82 | No |
C8 | Benign | Nonproliferative change | 50 | No |
C9 | Benign | Fibrocystic and fibro adenomatoid changes, focal epithelial hyperplasia | 51 | No |
C10 | Benign | Fragments of reactive lymph node tissue, unremarkable breast parenchyma | 61 | No |
C11 | Benign | Biopsy specimen: nonproliferative (fibrocystic) change (fibro adenomatoid hyperplasia, cysts, fibrosis); lumpectomy specimen: proliferative breast disease without atypia (moderate ductal epithelial hyperplasia, columnar cell type); regional dense stromal fibrosis | 44 | No |
C12 | Benign | Papilloma | 60 | No |
C13 | Benign | Benign fibro glandular tissue with focus of inflammation suggestive of resolving fat necrosis | 64 | No |
C14 | Benign | Focal abscess with mixed acute and chronic inflammation, histiocytes, and fibrosis | 36 | No |
C15 | Benign | Atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) involving a complex intraductal papilloma | 46 | Yes, in 2017 |
C16 | Benign | Sclerosed complex papillary lesion | 57 | No |
C17 | Benign | Fibroadenoma | 46 | No |
C18 | Benign | Fat necrosis with calcifications, florid ductal epithelial hyperplasia | 48 | No |
C19 | Benign | Smooth muscle tumor | 63 | No |
C20 | Benign | Complex papillary lesion without atypia | 59 | No |
Characteristics | Control n = 20 | Breast Cancer n = 90 (100%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Sex | Male | 0 | 0 |
Female | 20 | 90 | |
Age (years) | Mean ± SD (range) | 66 ± 11 (52–87) | 64 ± 12 (42–91) |
Tumor Receptor Status | ER+ve (%) | 73 (81.11) | |
ER−ve (%) | 17 (18.89) | ||
PR+ve (%) | 68 (75.56) | ||
PR−ve (%) | 22 (24.44) | ||
HER2+ve (%) | 19 (21.11) | ||
HER2−ve (%) | 71 (78.89) | ||
ER/PR/HER2−ve (%) | 8 (8.89) | ||
TNM (Tumor) Staging | 0 | 1 (1.11) | |
I | 43 (47.78) | ||
II | 36 (40.00) | ||
III | 8 (8.89) | ||
IV | 2 (2.22) |
Mean Ct Cut-Off | Sensitivity (%) | Specificity (%) | PPV (95% CI) | NPV (95% CI) | Accuracy (95% CI) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pri-miR526b | 6.73 | 86.02 | 41.18 | 88.89 (80.51–94.54) | 35.00 (15.39–59.22) | 80.70 (71.30–87.02) |
Pri-miR655 | 3.63 | 80.85 | 12.5 | 84.44 (75.28–91.23) | 10.00 (1.24–31.70) | 71.82 (62.44–79.98) |
Unstratified Tumor vs. Control | Stratified Tumor (Stage I) vs. Control | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Pri-miR526b | Pri-miR655 | Pri-miR526b | Pri-miR655 | |
AUC (95% CI) | 71.47 (59.80–83.14) | 58.56 (46.86–70.25) | 72.73 (59.84–85.62) | 59.20 (45.40–73.01) |
p-value | 0.0027 | 0.2327 | 0.0037 | 0.2408 |
Sensitivity (95% CI) | 86.02 (77.28–92.34) | 80.85 (71.44–88.24) | 75.00 (61.05–85.97) | 67.27 (53.29–79.32) |
Specificity (95% CI) | 41.18 (18.44–67.08) | 12.50 (1.55–38.35) | 58.33 (27.67–84.83) | 22.22 (2.815–60.10) |
Tumor Status | No. of Samples n (%) | High Pri-miR526b n (%) | Z-Score | p-Value | High Pri-miR655 n (%) | Z-Score | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ER+ve | 73 (81.1) | 60 (82.1) | 2.0872 | 0.0366 | 58 (79.4) | 2.7201 | 0.0065 |
ER−ve | 17 (18.9) | 10 (58.8) | 8 (47.0) | ||||
PR+ve | 68 (75.6) | 55 (80.9) | 1.2455 | 0.2113 | 53 (77.9) | 1.7379 | 0.0819 |
PR−ve | 22 (24.4) | 15 (68.2) | 13 (59.1) | ||||
HER2+ve | 19 (21.1) | 10 (52.6) | −2.7888 | 0.0053 | 10 (52.6) | −2.1465 | 0.0316 |
HER2−ve | 71 (78.9) | 59 (83.1) | 55 (77.5) |
Ct Cutoff | BC High Pri-miRNA | Benign High Pri-miRNA | Odds Ratio | 95% CI | p-Value | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pri-miR526b | 6.73 | 80 | 13 | 4.308 | 1.391–13.34 | 0.0142 |
Pri-miR655 | 3.63 | 76 | 18 | 0.6032 | 0.126–2.895 | 0.7316 |
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Majumder, M.; Ugwuagbo, K.C.; Maiti, S.; Lala, P.K.; Brackstone, M. Pri-miR526b and Pri-miR655 Are Potential Blood Biomarkers for Breast Cancer. Cancers 2021, 13, 3838. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13153838
Majumder M, Ugwuagbo KC, Maiti S, Lala PK, Brackstone M. Pri-miR526b and Pri-miR655 Are Potential Blood Biomarkers for Breast Cancer. Cancers. 2021; 13(15):3838. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13153838
Chicago/Turabian StyleMajumder, Mousumi, Kingsley Chukwunonso Ugwuagbo, Sujit Maiti, Peeyush K Lala, and Muriel Brackstone. 2021. "Pri-miR526b and Pri-miR655 Are Potential Blood Biomarkers for Breast Cancer" Cancers 13, no. 15: 3838. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13153838