PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Circulating levels of microRNA193a-5p predict outcome in early stage hepatocellular carcinoma.

  • Sven H Loosen,
  • Theresa H Wirtz,
  • Sanchari Roy,
  • Mihael Vucur,
  • Mirco Castoldi,
  • Anne T Schneider,
  • Christiane Koppe,
  • Tom F Ulmer,
  • Anjali A Roeth,
  • Jan Bednarsch,
  • Patrick H Alizai,
  • Pia Paffenholz,
  • Münevver Demir,
  • Christian Trautwein,
  • Frank Tacke,
  • Ulf P Neumann,
  • Christoph Roderburg,
  • Tom Luedde

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239386
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 9
p. e0239386

Abstract

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While tumor resection and liver transplantation (LT) represent potentially curative therapeutic options for patients with early-stage hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the identification of the ideal surgical candidates has remained challenging. Just recently, miRNA-193a-5p was described as a tumor suppressor in murine and human HCC but only little is known about circulating miRNA-193a-5p in HCC patients. Here, we evaluated serum levels of miR-193a-5p by qPCR in 41 HCC patients undergoing tumor resection (n = 33) or LT (n = 8) and 20 controls. Circulating relative miR-193a-5p levels were significantly elevated in HCC patients compared to healthy controls. While relative miR-193a-5p levels were comparable between patients of different underlying disease etiology and tumor size, high relative miR-193a-5p levels were predictive for the patients' postoperative outcome, which was confirmed in uni- and multivariate Cox-regression analysis. As such, HCC patients with a preoperative relative miR-193a-5p level above the ideal cut-off value (3.57) had a median overall survival (OS) of only 451 days compared to 1158 days in patients with a relative miR-193a-5p level below this cut-off value. Our data support a novel function of miR-193a-5p as a biomarker in early-stage HCC patients that might help to identify the best surgical candidates in terms of postoperative outcome.