Conclusion
We showed for the first time that miR-146a-5p and miR-186-5p are significantly associated with prevalent and incident knee OA, respectively.
Methods
With a next-generation sequencing approach, we compared the miRome expression of 10 women with knee OA and 10 age-matched healthy subjects. By real-time qPCR, we analyzed the expression levels of 19 miRNAs at baseline selecting 43 women with prevalent knee OA (Kellgren Lawrence score of 2/3), 23 women with incident knee OA over a 4-year follow-up and 67 healthy subjects without prevalent or incident OA matched for age and body mass index.
Results
Serum miR-146a-5p was significantly increased in the group of prevalent knee OA compared with controls (relative quantification (RQ); median [Interquartile range] 1.12 [0.73; 1.46] vs 0.85 [0.62; 1.03], p = 0.015). The likelihood of prevalent knee OA was significantly increased (odds ratio [95% confidence interval (CI)] 1.83 [1.21-2.77], p = 0.004) for each quartile increase in serum miR-146a-5p. The women with miR-146a-5p levels above the median (0.851) had a higher risk of prevalent knee OA compared to those below the median [95% CI] 4.62 [1.85-11.5], p = 0.001. Moreover, we found a significant association between the baseline level of serum miR-186-5p and the risk of incident knee OA (Q4 vs Q1-3; odds ratio [95% CI] 6.13 [1.14-32.9], p = 0.034).
