3.9 Article

Longitudinal evaluation of serum microRNAs as biomarkers for neuroblastoma burden and therapeutic p53 reactivation

Journal

NAR CANCER
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/narcan/zcad002

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In this study, we evaluated whether circulating miRNAs can be used to monitor neuroblastoma tumor burden and treatment-induced changes in the tumor. We performed small RNA sequencing on serum samples from mice with neuroblastoma xenografts treated with idasanutlin or temsirolimus. We identified serum miRNAs that correlated with tumor tissue expression and tumor volume, as well as miRNAs that responded to p53 activation following idasanutlin treatment.
Accurate assessment of treatment response and residual disease is indispensable for the evaluation of cancer treatment efficacy. However, performing tissue biopsies for longitudinal follow-up poses a major challenge in the management of solid tumours like neuroblastoma. In the present study, we evaluated whether circulating miRNAs are suitable to monitor neuroblastoma tumour burden and whether treatment-induced changes of miRNA abundance in the tumour are detectable in serum. We performed small RNA sequencing on longitudinally collected serum samples from mice carrying orthotopic neuroblastoma xenografts that were exposed to treatment with idasanutlin or temsirolimus. We identified 57 serum miRNAs to be differentially expressed upon xenograft tumour manifestation, out of which 21 were also found specifically expressed in the serum of human high-risk neuroblastoma patients. The murine serum levels of these 57 miRNAs correlated with tumour tissue expression and tumour volume, suggesting potential utility for monitoring tumour burden. In addition, we describe serum miRNAs that dynamically respond to p53 activation following treatment of engrafted mice with idasanutlin. We identified idasanutlin-induced serum miRNA expression changes upon one day and 11 days of treatment. By limiting to miRNAs with a tumour-related induction, we put forward hsa-miR-34a-5p as a potential pharmacodynamic biomarker of p53 activation in serum.

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