Investigator

Sina Rostami

Researcher · Oslo University Hospital, Department of Paediatric Research

SRSina Rostami
Papers(1)
Differential levels o…
Collaborators(5)
Tone BjørgeTrine B. RoungeØystein Ariansen Haal…Fredrik WiklundHilde Langseth
Institutions(3)
Cancer Registry Of No…University Of BergenKarolinska Institutet

Papers

Differential levels of circulating RNAs prior to endometrial cancer diagnosis

AbstractEndometrial cancer (EC) is one of the most common female cancers and there is currently no routine screening strategy for early detection. An altered abundance of circulating microRNAs (miRNAs) and other RNA classes have the potential as early cancer biomarkers. We analyzed circulating RNA levels using small RNA sequencing, targeting RNAs in the size range of 17–47 nucleotides, in EC patients with samples collected prior to diagnosis compared to cancer‐free controls. The analysis included 316 cases with samples collected 1–11 years prior to EC diagnosis, and 316 matched controls, both from the Janus Serum Bank cohort in Norway. We identified differentially abundant (DA) miRNAs, isomiRs, and small nuclear RNAs between EC cases and controls. The top EC DA miRNAs were miR‐155‐5p, miR‐200b‐3p, miR‐589‐5p, miR‐151a‐5p, miR‐543, miR‐485‐5p, miR‐625‐p, and miR‐671‐3p. miR‐200b‐3p was previously reported to be among one of the top miRNAs with higher abundance in EC cases. We observed 47, 41, and 32 DA miRNAs for EC interacting with BMI, smoking status, and physical activity, respectively, including two miRNAs (miR‐223‐3p and miR‐29b‐3p) interacting with all three factors. The circulating RNAs are altered and show temporal dynamics prior to EC diagnosis. Notably, DA miRNAs for EC had the lowest q‐value 4.39–6.66 years before diagnosis. Enrichment analysis of miRNAs showed that signaling pathways Fc epsilon RI, prolactin, toll‐like receptor, and VEGF had the strongest associations.

1Papers
5Collaborators

Positions

2025–

Researcher

Oslo University Hospital · Department of Paediatric Research

2021–

Postdoc

Norwegian Institute of Public Health · Department of Research, Cancer Registry of Norway

2020–

Researcher (part-time)

University of Oslo · Department of Pharmacy

Country

NO

Keywords
BioinformaticsMolecular EpidemiologyEpidemiologyCell and Molecular BiologyImmunology
Links & IDs
0000-0003-2667-3927

Scopus: 55629487200

Researcher Id: J-6144-2014