Abstract

Background:We aimed to better discriminate (occult) metastasised from non-metastasised seminoma based on transcriptional changes of small RNAs in the primary tumour.Methods:Total RNAs including small RNAs were isolated from five testicular tumours of each, lymphogenic, occult and non-metastasised patients. Next-generation sequencing (SOLID, Life Technologies) was used to examine transcriptional changes. Small RNAs showing ⩾50 reads and a significant ⩾2-fold difference using non-metastasised tumours as the reference group were examined in univariate logistic regression analysis and combinations of two small RNAs were further examined using support vector machines.Results:On average, 1.3 × 107, 1.4 × 107 and 1.7 × 107 small RNA reads were detectable in non-metastasised, occult and lymphogenic metastasised seminoma, respectively, of which 30–32% remained after trimming. Between 59 and 68% represented annotated reads and between 8.6 and 11% were annotated small RNA tags. Of them, 137 small RNAs showed>50 reads and a two-fold difference to the reference. In univariate analysis, 32–38 small RNAs significantly discriminated lymphogenic/occult from non-metastasised seminoma, and among these different comparisons, it were the same small RNAs in 51–88%. Many combinations of two of these small RNAs allowed a complete discrimination of metastasised from non-metastasised seminoma irrespective of the metastasis subtype.Conclusions:Metastasised and non-metastasised seminoma can be completely discriminated with a combination of two small RNAs.

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