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Published in: Medical Oncology 10/2014

01-10-2014 | Original Paper

Urinary cell-free microRNA-106b as a novel biomarker for detection of bladder cancer

Authors: Xuanjun Zhou, Xin Zhang, Yongmei Yang, Zewu Li, Lutao Du, Zhaogang Dong, Ailin Qu, Xiumei Jiang, Peilong Li, Chuanxin Wang

Published in: Medical Oncology | Issue 10/2014

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Abstract

Cell-free microRNAs (miRNAs) stably and abundantly exist in body fluids and emerging evidence suggests cell-free miRNAs as a novel class of noninvasive disease biomarkers. In this study, we hypothesized that the quantitative detection of the oncogenic miR-106b-25 cluster in urine could be a useful clinical biomarker for bladder cancer (BCa). Three members of the miR-106b-25 cluster (miR-106b, miR-93 and miR-25) were quantified by real-time RT-PCR in urine supernatant of 112 BCa patients and 78 age-matched controls. In our study, the urinary levels of miR-106b were significantly higher in BCa patients than controls (P < 0.001). No significant difference was observed in the urinary levels of miR-93 and miR-25 between two groups. Furthermore, the levels of urinary miR-106b were significantly reduced in postoperative samples compared with the levels in the preoperative samples (P = 0.007). With respect of clinicopathological characteristics, the level of urinary miR-106b was associated with advanced tumor stage. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis revealed that urinary miR-106b had considerable diagnostic accuracy, yielding an AUC (the areas under the ROC curve) of 0.802 with 76.8 % sensitivity and 72.4 % specificity in differentiating BCa from controls. In conclusion, our data indicate that urinary cell-free miR-106b might provide new complementary tumor biomarkers for BCa.
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Metadata
Title
Urinary cell-free microRNA-106b as a novel biomarker for detection of bladder cancer
Authors
Xuanjun Zhou
Xin Zhang
Yongmei Yang
Zewu Li
Lutao Du
Zhaogang Dong
Ailin Qu
Xiumei Jiang
Peilong Li
Chuanxin Wang
Publication date
01-10-2014
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Medical Oncology / Issue 10/2014
Print ISSN: 1357-0560
Electronic ISSN: 1559-131X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12032-014-0197-z

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