Title of article
Comparing Salivary Mir-125 And Mir-30 Expression In Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma To Healthy Individuals
Author/Authors
Bahrami ، Naghmeh Department of Tissue Engineering and Applied Cell Sciences - School of Advanced Technologies in Medicine, Craniomaxillofacial Research Center - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Poorahmad ، Marziyeh Department of Genetic - School of Biological Sciences - Islamic Azad University, North Tehran Branch , Hosseini ، Farzaneh Department of Microbiology - School of Biological Sciences - Islamic Azad University, North Tehran Branch , Mohammadi ، Farnoush Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery - Craniomaxillofacial Research Center, School of Dentistry - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Rasouli ، Amir Department of Biology - Islamic Azad University, Shahr-e-Qods Branch , Mohajeri Tehrani ، Mona Craniomaxillofacial Research Center - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Farhangiyan ، Masoume Craniomaxillofacial Research Center - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Mohamadnia ، Abdolreza Department of Biotechnology - Chronic Respiratory Diseases Research Center, NRITLD, School of Advanced Technologies in Medicine - Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences
From page
162
To page
166
Abstract
Introduction: OSCC (Oral squamous cell carcinoma) accounts for approximately 90% of all oral malignancies and is usually diagnosed at advanced stages. This study investigates changes in miR-125 and miR-30 expression in relation to the clinical findings of oral cavity cancer and their possible use as an early diagnostic tool. Materials and Methods: A population of 30 individuals with oral squamous cell carcinoma and 30 healthy individuals was studied, and the mean age of two groups were compared using a t-test, with no significant difference found in terms of age so age will not be an interfering factor in this study. The levels of these two biomarkers (miR-125 and miR-30) were measured and evaluated using real-time PCR technique. Results: After evaluating the results of real-time PCR technique, it was found that miR-125 was positive in 25 out of 30 patients, while it was positive in 5 out of 30 healthy individuals (p-value≤ 0.001). miR-30 was a positive biomarker in 10 out of 30 patients. The amount of this biomarker in the group of healthy individuals was 26 out of 30 (p-value 0.001). Conclusion: The miR-125 profile is upregulated in the saliva of OSCC cases, whereas the miR- 30 profile is downregulated in the aforementioned patients compared with the healthy group. Therefore, measurement of miR-125 and miR-30 may be a protentional diagnostic test to identify OSCC. We suggest more extensive studies with a larger sample size to support this claim.
Keywords
Oral squamous cell carcinoma , MiR , 125 , MiR , 30 , Biomarker
Journal title
Journal of Craniomaxillofacial Research (JCR)
Journal title
Journal of Craniomaxillofacial Research (JCR)
Record number
2759243
Link To Document