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Assay Reproducibility in Clinical Studies of Plasma miRNA

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  • Jonathan Rice
  • Henry Roberts
  • James Burton
  • Jianmin Pan
  • Vanessa States
  • Shesh N Rai
  • Susan Galandiuk

Abstract

There are increasing reports of plasma miRNAs as biomarkers of human disease but few standards in methodologic reporting, leading to inconsistent data. We systematically reviewed plasma miRNA studies published between July 2013-June 2014 to assess methodology. Six parameters were investigated: time to plasma extraction, methods of RNA extraction, type of miRNA, quantification, cycle threshold (Ct) setting, and methods of statistical analysis. We compared these data with a proposed standard methodologic technique. Beginning with initial screening for 380 miRNAs using microfluidic array technology and validation in an additional cohort of patients, we compared 11 miRNAs that exhibited differential expression between 16 patients with benign colorectal neoplasms (advanced adenomas) and 16 patients without any neoplasm (controls). Plasma was isolated immediately, 12, 24, 48, or 72 h following phlebotomy. miRNA was extracted using two different techniques (Trizol LS with pre-amplification or modified miRNeasy). We performed Taqman-based RT-PCR assays for the 11 miRNAs with subsequent analyses using a variable Ct setting or a fixed Ct set at 0.01, 0.03, 0.05, or 0.5. Assays were performed in duplicate by two different operators. RNU6 was the internal reference. Systematic review yielded 74 manuscripts meeting inclusion criteria. One manuscript (1.4%) documented all 6 methodological parameters, while

Suggested Citation

  • Jonathan Rice & Henry Roberts & James Burton & Jianmin Pan & Vanessa States & Shesh N Rai & Susan Galandiuk, 2015. "Assay Reproducibility in Clinical Studies of Plasma miRNA," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(4), pages 1-23, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0121948
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0121948
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