MicroRNAs in toxic acute kidney injury: Systematic scoping review of the current status

Abstract Acute kidney injury induced by nephrotoxic agents is common, increasing in incidence and associated with considerable morbidity and mortality in developing countries. MicroRNAs are stable biomarkers that can be detected in extracellular fluids. This systematic scoping review aims to describ...

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Main Authors: Fathima Shihana, Melissa L. Barron, Fahim Mohamed, Devanshi Seth, Nicholas A. Buckley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-04-01
Series:Pharmacology Research & Perspectives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/prp2.695
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spelling doaj-b6374a99937f4bbd8a60fc2e5fece8cf2021-10-01T09:16:18ZengWileyPharmacology Research & Perspectives2052-17072021-04-0192n/an/a10.1002/prp2.695MicroRNAs in toxic acute kidney injury: Systematic scoping review of the current statusFathima Shihana0Melissa L. Barron1Fahim Mohamed2Devanshi Seth3Nicholas A. Buckley4Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology Research Group Discipline of Pharmacology Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Sydney NSW AustraliaClinical Pharmacology and Toxicology Research Group Discipline of Pharmacology Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Sydney NSW AustraliaClinical Pharmacology and Toxicology Research Group Discipline of Pharmacology Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Sydney NSW AustraliaDiscipline of Clinical Medicine & Addiction Medicine Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Sydney NSW AustraliaClinical Pharmacology and Toxicology Research Group Discipline of Pharmacology Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Sydney NSW AustraliaAbstract Acute kidney injury induced by nephrotoxic agents is common, increasing in incidence and associated with considerable morbidity and mortality in developing countries. MicroRNAs are stable biomarkers that can be detected in extracellular fluids. This systematic scoping review aims to describe published research on urinary and circulating microRNAs in toxic acute kidney injury in both animal and human studies. We conducted a literature search, using EMBASE and Medline, for articles on urinary and circulating microRNA in nephrotoxic injuries to February 2020. A total of 21 publications studied acute kidney injury from 12 different toxic agents. Cisplatin was the most common nephrotoxic agent (n = 10), followed by antibiotics (n = 4). There were no randomized controlled trials. An increase in urinary miR‐218 predicted acute kidney injury in six different studies, suggesting it is a promising biomarker for nephrotoxin‐induced acute kidney injury. There were many factors that prevented a more comprehensive synthesis of microRNA performance including highly variable models, no consistent protocols for RNA isolation, cDNA synthesis and PCR amplification, and variability in normalization methods using reference controls. In conclusion, while microRNAs are promising biomarkers to study nephrotoxic acute kidney injury, the replication of most positive findings is not assessable due to deficient reporting of negative outcomes. A very narrow range of poisons have been studied, and more human data are required. In particular, further studies are needed on the most important causes of nephrotoxic injury, such as pesticides, chemicals, snake envenoming, and medicines other than aminoglycosides and cisplatin.https://doi.org/10.1002/prp2.695acute kidney injurybiomarkerscirculating microRNAnephrotoxicityurinary microRNAs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fathima Shihana
Melissa L. Barron
Fahim Mohamed
Devanshi Seth
Nicholas A. Buckley
spellingShingle Fathima Shihana
Melissa L. Barron
Fahim Mohamed
Devanshi Seth
Nicholas A. Buckley
MicroRNAs in toxic acute kidney injury: Systematic scoping review of the current status
Pharmacology Research & Perspectives
acute kidney injury
biomarkers
circulating microRNA
nephrotoxicity
urinary microRNAs
author_facet Fathima Shihana
Melissa L. Barron
Fahim Mohamed
Devanshi Seth
Nicholas A. Buckley
author_sort Fathima Shihana
title MicroRNAs in toxic acute kidney injury: Systematic scoping review of the current status
title_short MicroRNAs in toxic acute kidney injury: Systematic scoping review of the current status
title_full MicroRNAs in toxic acute kidney injury: Systematic scoping review of the current status
title_fullStr MicroRNAs in toxic acute kidney injury: Systematic scoping review of the current status
title_full_unstemmed MicroRNAs in toxic acute kidney injury: Systematic scoping review of the current status
title_sort micrornas in toxic acute kidney injury: systematic scoping review of the current status
publisher Wiley
series Pharmacology Research & Perspectives
issn 2052-1707
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Acute kidney injury induced by nephrotoxic agents is common, increasing in incidence and associated with considerable morbidity and mortality in developing countries. MicroRNAs are stable biomarkers that can be detected in extracellular fluids. This systematic scoping review aims to describe published research on urinary and circulating microRNAs in toxic acute kidney injury in both animal and human studies. We conducted a literature search, using EMBASE and Medline, for articles on urinary and circulating microRNA in nephrotoxic injuries to February 2020. A total of 21 publications studied acute kidney injury from 12 different toxic agents. Cisplatin was the most common nephrotoxic agent (n = 10), followed by antibiotics (n = 4). There were no randomized controlled trials. An increase in urinary miR‐218 predicted acute kidney injury in six different studies, suggesting it is a promising biomarker for nephrotoxin‐induced acute kidney injury. There were many factors that prevented a more comprehensive synthesis of microRNA performance including highly variable models, no consistent protocols for RNA isolation, cDNA synthesis and PCR amplification, and variability in normalization methods using reference controls. In conclusion, while microRNAs are promising biomarkers to study nephrotoxic acute kidney injury, the replication of most positive findings is not assessable due to deficient reporting of negative outcomes. A very narrow range of poisons have been studied, and more human data are required. In particular, further studies are needed on the most important causes of nephrotoxic injury, such as pesticides, chemicals, snake envenoming, and medicines other than aminoglycosides and cisplatin.
topic acute kidney injury
biomarkers
circulating microRNA
nephrotoxicity
urinary microRNAs
url https://doi.org/10.1002/prp2.695
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