4.7 Review

Peripheral blood RNA biomarkers for cardiovascular disease from bench to bedside: a position paper from the EU-CardioRNA COST action CA17129

Journal

CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH
Volume 118, Issue 16, Pages 3183-3197

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/cvr/cvab327

Keywords

RNAs; Biomarkers; Genomics; Gene expression; Cardiovascular disease; Transcriptomics; Methodology standardization; Translational cardiovascular research

Funding

  1. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [CP20/00041]
  2. European Social Fund (ESF) 'Investing in your future'
  3. Carlos III Health Institute [CB16/11/00403]
  4. EU Horizon 2020 project COVIRNA [101016072]
  5. National Research Fund [C14/BM/8225223, C17/BM/11613033, COVID-19/2020-1/14719577/miRCOVID]
  6. Ministry of Higher Education and Research
  7. Heart Foundation-Daniel Wagner of Luxembourg
  8. British Heart Foundation [RG/15/5/31446, CH/15/1/31199]
  9. EU [101016072]
  10. Research England (Global Challenges Research fund 2019/2021)
  11. Eureka-Eurostars project THROMBOMIR through the FFG [871562]
  12. Scientific Grant Agency of the Ministry of Education, Science, Research and Sport of the Slovak Republic
  13. Slovak Academy of Sciences (grant VEGA) [2/0104/20]
  14. Italian Ministry of Health 'ricerca corrente' [RF-2019-12368521]
  15. Telethon Foundation [446 GGP19035A]
  16. AFM-Telethon [23054]
  17. EU Horizon project MEDIRAD (NFRP Call)
  18. EU Horizon project COVIRNA [101016072]

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This study provides recommendations to standardize the RNA development process in order to facilitate research on novel RNAs for clinical use. It discusses the unmet clinical needs in cardiovascular disease and explores factors such as sample types, patient demographics, and statistical and regulatory aspects.
Despite significant advances in the diagnosis and treatment of cardiovascular diseases, recent calls have emphasized the unmet need to improve precision-based approaches in cardiovascular disease. Although some studies provide preliminary evidence of the diagnostic and prognostic potential of circulating coding and non-coding RNAs, the complex RNA biology and lack of standardization have hampered the translation of these markers into clinical practice. In this position paper of the CardioRNA COST action CA17129, we provide recommendations to standardize the RNA development process in order to catalyse efforts to investigate novel RNAs for clinical use. We list the unmet clinical needs in cardiovascular disease, such as the identification of high-risk patients with ischaemic heart disease or heart failure who require more intensive therapies. The advantages and pitfalls of the different sample types, including RNAs from plasma, extracellular vesicles, and whole blood, are discussed in the sample matrix, together with their respective analytical methods. The effect of patient demographics and highly prevalent comorbidities, such as metabolic disorders, on the expression of the candidate RNA is presented and should be reported in biomarker studies. We discuss the statistical and regulatory aspects to translate a candidate RNA from a research use only assay to an in-vitro diagnostic test for clinical use. Optimal planning of this development track is required, with input from the researcher, statistician, industry, and regulatory partners.

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