Abstract 31P
Background
Cervical cancer (CC) is the fourth most common type of cancer among women worldwide. Considering that the early diagnosis of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) is the main strategy to improve the prognosis of patients, new methodologies based on molecular analyzes performed on liquid biopsy samples, represent promising alternatives for minimally invasive biomarkers. miRNAs have been shown their role as non-invasive biomarkers, providing a wide perspective for personalized treatment and early diagnosis of cervical cancer through liquid-based cytology (LBC). However, more research is under way to identify miRNA signatures that can be implemented in clinical practice specially for early detection. In this study, we aimed to identify molecular signatures of miRNAs in cervical precursor lesions (CIN 2 and CIN 3) from LBC and their interaction with molecular pathways related to CC in a prospective study.
Methods
We analyzed 96 LBC cervical samples, that were divided into two groups: the case group was composed of women diagnosed with CIN 2 and CIN3 (n = 48); the control group corresponded to women without cervical precursor lesions (n = 48). We performed miRNA expression profiling using the nCounter® miRNA Expression Assay (NanoString Technology), which evaluated 800 targets. A functional analysis in silico was performed by mirDIP and enrichment were performed using Cytoscape with the Reactome plugin.
Results
We identified 54 miRNAs that were differentially expressed between case and control groups (p ≤ 0.05). Using logistic regression analysis, we identified a signature composed of five miRNAs, with a fold change ≥ 1.5 and FDR-corrected p-value of ≤ 0.05, of which two were up-regulated and three were down-regulated. The signature had a predictive value with an AUC of 0.90. Furthermore, we found 26 miRNA target genes for four of the five identified miRNAs, mainly related to pathways in cancer, RNA Polymerase II Transcription, RhoA signaling pathway, and PI3K-Akt signaling pathway.
Conclusions
This study demonstrated that those miRNAs could be used as non-invasive biomarkers in LBC samples, once they were able to distinguish CIN 2 and CIN3 patients from healthy women and regulate important molecular pathways of onset carcinogenesis.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
Barretos Cancer Hospital.
Funding
Programa Nacional de Apoio à Atenção Oncológica.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
14P - Peripheral immune kinetics in survival prediction of small cell lung cancer patients treated with immune checkpoint blockade therapy
Presenter: MIGUEL GALINDO CAMPOS
Session: Poster session 09
15P - CBL E3 ubiquitin ligases are key inhibitory regulators in PD-1/LAG-3 co-signaling in human cancers, targeted through bispecific co-blockade
Presenter: Luisa Chocarro
Session: Poster session 09
16P - Terminally exhausted CD8+ T cells and increased immunosuppressive soluble factors in malignant ascites of patients with gastric cancer with peritoneal metastasis
Presenter: Hye Sook Han
Session: Poster session 09
17P - Continued expansion of long-lived effect CD8+ T cells associates with durable response post-PD-1 blockade
Presenter: Robert Watson
Session: Poster session 09
18P - Exposure of calreticulin is required for vitamin C immunomediated cancer surveillance
Presenter: Alessandro Cavaliere
Session: Poster session 09
19P - Preclinical and clinical significance of VEGF deprivation in ovarian cancer through a specific active immunotherapy
Presenter: Yanelys Morera
Session: Poster session 09
20P - The essential role of DNA repair in the pharmacological activities of AST-3424
Presenter: Fanying Meng
Session: Poster session 09
21P - Implications of KMT2C knockdown for DNA damage repair in breast cancer
Presenter: Philip Bredin
Session: Poster session 09
22P - Clinical significance of DNA damage response mutations in early stage NSCLC
Presenter: Haoran Zhang
Session: Poster session 09
23P - PMC-309: A highly selective anti-VISTA antibody reverses immunosuppressive TME to immune-supportive
Presenter: Cheon Ho Park
Session: Poster session 09