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Urinary MicroRNAs as Biomarkers of Urological Cancers: A Systematic Review

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241310846

Keywords

microRNAs; biomarkers; urological cancers; prostate cancer; bladder cancer; upper tract urothelial carcinoma; renal cancer

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Through a systematic review of scientific databases, it has been found that urinary miRNAs (umiRNAs) have potential applications in the detection, prognosis, and therapy of genitourinary cancers. In bladder cancer and urothelial carcinoma, several umiRNAs have been identified as potential non-invasive molecular biomarkers. In prostate cancer and renal cell carcinoma, umiRNAs may serve as therapeutic targets or prognostic markers. These findings suggest that umiRNAs could play an important role in the diagnosis, prognosis, and therapy of urological cancers.
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are emerging as biomarkers for the detection and prognosis of cancers due to their inherent stability and resilience. To summarize the evidence regarding the role of urinary miRNAs (umiRNAs) in the detection, prognosis, and therapy of genitourinary cancers, we performed a systematic review of the most important scientific databases using the following keywords: (urinary miRNA) AND (prostate cancer); (urinary miRNA) AND (bladder cancer); (urinary miRNA) AND (renal cancer); (urinary miRNA) AND (testicular cancer); (urinary miRNA) AND (urothelial cancer). Of all, 1364 articles were screened. Only original studies in the English language on human specimens were considered for inclusion in our systematic review. Thus, a convenient sample of 60 original articles was identified. UmiRNAs are up- or downregulated in prostate cancer and may serve as potential non-invasive molecular biomarkers. Several umiRNAs have been identified as diagnostic biomarkers of urothelial carcinoma and bladder cancer (BC), allowing us to discriminate malignant from nonmalignant forms of hematuria. UmiRNAs could serve as therapeutic targets or recurrence markers of non-muscle-invasive BC and could predict the aggressivity and prognosis of muscle-invasive BC. In renal cell carcinoma, miRNAs have been identified as predictors of tumor detection, aggressiveness, and progression to metastasis. UmiRNAs could play an important role in the diagnosis, prognosis, and therapy of urological cancers.

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