| Literature DB >> 26927196 |
Imeke Goldschmidt1,2, Thomas Thum3,4, Ulrich Baumann5,6.
Abstract
Circulating microRNAs have been investigated as markers of disease severity in a variety of conditions. We examined whether circulating miR-21 and miR-29a could serve as markers of hepatic fibrosis and disease etiology in children with various liver diseases. Circulating miR-21 and miR-29a were determined in 58 children (21 female, age 0.1-17.8 (median 9.8) years)) with chronic liver disease and compared to histological grading of hepatic fibrosis. 22 healthy children served as controls for circulating miRNAs. Levels of circulating miR-21 appeared to be age-dependent in healthy children. Children with biliary atresia had significantly higher levels of miR-21 compared both to healthy controls and to age-matched children with other cholestatic liver disease. Circulating miR-29a levels in biliary atresia children did not differ from healthy controls, but tended to be higher than in age-matched children with other cholestatic liver disease. Neither miR-21 nor miR-29a correlated well with hepatic fibrosis. Circulating miR-21 and miR-29a levels can potentially serve as non-invasive diagnostic markers to differentiate biliary atresia from other cholestatic disease in infancy. They do not appear suitable as non-invasive markers for the degree of hepatic fibrosis in an unselected cohort of children with various liver diseases. The discriminating effect regarding neonatal cholestasis should be followed up in a prospective longitudinal study.Entities:
Keywords: biliary atresia; hepatic fibrosis; microRNA; paediatrics
Year: 2016 PMID: 26927196 PMCID: PMC4810099 DOI: 10.3390/jcm5030028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Circulating levels of miR-21 (A) and miR-29a (B) are compared between children with biliary atresia (BA), children with cholestatic disease other than biliary atresia (non-BA), and healthy controls (Con). ★ indicates p < 0.05. n.s.: not statistically significant.
Figure 2Circulating levels of miR-21 (A) and miR-29a (B) are compared between children with biliary atresia (BA) and age-matched children with cholestatic disease other than biliary atresia (nBA-C). ★ indicates p < 0.05.
Figure 3Circulating miR-21 (A) and miR-29a (B) are plotted against age in biliary atresia children. While these represent cross-sectional, not longitudinal data, there still appears to be a change in miRNA expression over time that potentially correlates with stage of disease.
Circulating miR-21 and miR-29a levels in various etiological groups.
| miR-21 [2(−ΔΔ | Disease | miR29a [2(−ΔΔ | Disease | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Controls for AIH ( | 0.78 (0.23–1.53) | 0.92 (0.20–2.37) | ||
| Controls for AFLD/NASH & PSC ( | 0.74 (0.23–1.27) | 0.86 (0.20–2.37) | ||
| AIH ( | 0.72 (0.50–1.73) | 0.67 (0.21–1.26) | ||
| NAFLD/NASH ( | 0.82 (0.36–1.78) | 0.85 (0.31–1.49) | ||
| PSC ( | 0.44 (0.32–1.24) | 0.37 (0.13–1.0 |