Journal of Translational Medicine (Aug 2012)

Serum microRNAs as biomarkers for recurrence in melanoma

  • Friedman Erica B,
  • Shang Shulian,
  • de Miera Eleazar,
  • Fog Jacob,
  • Teilum Maria,
  • Ma Michelle W,
  • Berman Russell S,
  • Shapiro Richard L,
  • Pavlick Anna C,
  • Hernando Eva,
  • Baker Adam,
  • Shao Yongzhao,
  • Osman Iman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-10-155
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
p. 155

Abstract

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Abstract Background Identification of melanoma patients at high risk for recurrence and monitoring for recurrence are critical for informed management decisions. We hypothesized that serum microRNAs (miRNAs) could provide prognostic information at the time of diagnosis unaccounted for by the current staging system and could be useful in detecting recurrence after resection. Methods We screened 355 miRNAs in sera from 80 melanoma patients at primary diagnosis (discovery cohort) using a unique quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (qRT-PCR) panel. Cox proportional hazard models and Kaplan-Meier recurrence-free survival (RFS) curves were used to identify a miRNA signature with prognostic potential adjusting for stage. We then tested the miRNA signature in an independent cohort of 50 primary melanoma patients (validation cohort). Logistic regression analysis was performed to determine if the miRNA signature can determine risk of recurrence in both cohorts. Selected miRNAs were measured longitudinally in subsets of patients pre-/post-operatively and pre-/post-recurrence. Results A signature of 5 miRNAs successfully classified melanoma patients into high and low recurrence risk groups with significant separation of RFS in both discovery and validation cohorts (p = 0.0036, p = 0.0093, respectively). Significant separation of RFS was maintained when a logistic model containing the same signature set was used to predict recurrence risk in both discovery and validation cohorts (p Conclusion Our data demonstrate that serum miRNAs can improve accuracy in identifying primary melanoma patients with high recurrence risk and in monitoring melanoma tumor burden over time.

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