Abstract

Ovarian cancer is the leading cause of death among gynecologic malignancies. Since ovarian cancer develops asymptomatically, it is often diagnosed at an advanced and incurable stage. Despite many years of research, there is still a lack of reliable diagnostic markers and methods for early detection and screening. Recently, it was discovered that cell-free microRNAs (miRNAs) circulate in the body fluids of healthy and diseased patients, suggesting that they may serve as a novel diagnostic marker. This review summarizes the current knowledge regarding the potential clinical relevance of circulating cell-free miRNA for ovarian cancer diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutics. Despite the high levels of ribonucleases in many types of body fluids, most of the circulating miRNAs are packaged in microvesicles, exosomes, or apoptotic bodies, are binding to RNA-binding protein such as argonaute 2 or lipoprotein complexes, and are thus highly stable. Cell-free miRNA signatures are known to be parallel to those from the originating tumor cells, indicating that circulating miRNA profiles accurately reflect the tumor profiles. Since it is well established that the dysregulation of miRNAs is involved in the tumorigenesis of ovarian cancer, cell-free miRNAs circulating in body fluids such as serum, plasma, whole blood, and urine may reflect not only the existence of ovarian cancer but also tumor histology, stage, and prognoses of the patients. Several groups have successfully demonstrated that serum or plasma miRNAs are able to discriminate patients with ovarian cancer patients from healthy controls, suggesting that the addition of these miRNAs to current testing regimens may improve diagnosis accuracies for ovarian cancer. Furthermore, recent studies have revealed that changes in levels of cell-free circulating miRNAs are associated with the condition of cancer patients. Discrepancies between the results across studies due to the lack of an established endogenous miRNA control to normalize for circulating miRNA levels, as well as differing extraction and quantification methods, are the pitfalls to be resolved before clinical application. There is still a long way, however, before this can be achieved, and further evidence would make it possible to apply circulating cell-free miRNAs not only as biomarkers but also as potential therapeutic targets for ovarian cancer in the future.

Highlights

  • Ovarian cancer is the leading cause of gynecological cancer-associated deaths in developed countries

  • This review summarizes the cumulative efforts in the field of circulating miRNAs focusing on their potential as novel biomarkers in ovarian cancer

  • In recent years, emerging evidence has suggested that circulating miRNAs may hold great potential as promising biomarkers for early detection, prognosis, and sensitivity to chemotherapy of ovarian cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Ovarian cancer is the leading cause of gynecological cancer-associated deaths in developed countries. In the recent study with 118 patients with ovarian cancer, 84 with benign disease, and 61 healthy females, the sensitivity and specificity of CA125 were 77.4 and 70.8 %, respectively [5]. Development of novel approaches to effectively detect ovarian cancer at an early, curable stage is urgently required. Another cause of this high mortality rate is the resistance to chemotherapy, especially in recurrent cases. A potent oral PARP inhibitor, significantly improved progression-free survival in patients with platinum-sensitive, relapsed, high-grade serous ovarian cancer; interim analysis showed no overall survival benefit [9]. This review summarizes the cumulative efforts in the field of circulating miRNAs focusing on their potential as novel biomarkers in ovarian cancer

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