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Salivary exRNA biomarkers to detect gingivitis and monitor disease regression.
- Kaczor-Urbanowicz, Karolina E;
- Trivedi, Harsh M;
- Lima, Patricia O;
- Camargo, Paulo M;
- Giannobile, William V;
- Grogan, Tristan R;
- Gleber-Netto, Frederico O;
- Whiteman, Yair;
- Li, Feng;
- Lee, Hyo Jung;
- Dharia, Karan;
- Aro, Katri;
- Martin Carreras-Presas, Carmen;
- Amuthan, Saarah;
- Vartak, Manjiri;
- Akin, David;
- Al-Adbullah, Hiba;
- Bembey, Kanika;
- Klokkevold, Perry R;
- Elashoff, David;
- Barnes, Virginia M;
- Richter, Rose;
- DeVizio, William;
- Masters, James G;
- Wong, David TW
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1111/jcpe.12930Abstract
Aim
This study tests the hypothesis that salivary extracellular RNA (exRNA) biomarkers can be developed for gingivitis detection and monitoring disease regression.Materials and methods
Salivary exRNA biomarker candidates were developed from a total of 100 gingivitis and non-gingivitis individuals using Affymetrix's expression microarrays. The top 10 differentially expressed exRNAs were tested in a clinical cohort to determine whether the discovered salivary exRNA markers for gingivitis were associated with clinical gingivitis and disease regression. For this purpose, unstimulated saliva was collected from 30 randomly selected gingivitis subjects, the gingival and plaque indexes scores were taken at baseline, 3 and 6 weeks and salivary exRNAs were assayed by means of reverse transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction.Results
Eight salivary exRNA biomarkers developed for gingivitis were statistically significantly changed over time, consistent with disease regression. A panel of four salivary exRNAs [SPRR1A, lnc-TET3-2:1, FAM25A, CRCT1] can detect gingivitis with a clinical performance of 0.91 area under the curve, with 71% sensitivity and 100% specificity.Conclusions
The clinical values of the developed salivary exRNA biomarkers are associated with gingivitis regression. They offer strong potential to be advanced for definitive validation and clinical laboratory development test.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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