Cervical cancer

Effect of miRNA-203 on cervical cancer cells and its underlying mechanism

X. Z. Yin, Zhao, D. M., Zhang, G. X., Liu, L., Yin, X. Z., Zhao, D. M., Zhang, G. X., and Liu, L., Effect of miRNA-203 on cervical cancer cells and its underlying mechanism, vol. 15, p. -, 2016.

miRNA-203 is involved in the development and progression of various types of cancer. However, its role in cervical cancer remains unclear. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of miRNA-203 on the proliferation and migration of HeLa cervical cancer cells, as well as survivin expression in these cells. A miRNA-203 primer probe was designed according to a sequence obtained from NCBI. The expression of miRNA-203 in cervical epithelial cells and cervical cancer cells was detected by quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction.

Evaluation of novel assays for the detection of human papilloma virus in self-collected samples for cervical cancer screening

Q. Chen, Du, H., Zhang, R., Zhao, J. H., Hu, Q. C., Wang, C., Wang, G. X., Tang, J. L., Wu, R. F., Chen, Q., Du, H., Zhang, R., Zhao, J. H., Hu, Q. C., Wang, C., Wang, G. X., Tang, J. L., and Wu, R. F., Evaluation of novel assays for the detection of human papilloma virus in self-collected samples for cervical cancer screening, vol. 15, p. -, 2016.

The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance of three new high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) assays for primary cervical cancer screening, by using self-collected samples, and to identify an HPV assay that could overcome the major obstacles faced during large-scale population-based screening. Two hundred and ten women showing abnormal cervical cytology (and referred for a colposcopy) were recruited in this study.

Association of the programmed cell death-1 PD1.5 C>T polymorphism with cervical cancer risk in a Chinese population

X. F. Li, Jiang, X. Q., Zhang, J. W., Jia, Y. J., Li, X. F., Jiang, X. Q., Zhang, J. W., Jia, Y. J., Li, X. F., Jiang, X. Q., Zhang, J. W., and Jia, Y. J., Association of the programmed cell death-1 PD1.5 C>T polymorphism with cervical cancer risk in a Chinese population, vol. 15, p. -, 2016.

The association of the programmed cell death-1 PD1.5 C>T polymorphism with cervical cancer risk has not been investigated. In this hospital-based case-control study, we analyzed 256 patients with cervical cancer and 250 healthy controls. Pearson chi-square test was used to examine differences in the distribution of genotypes between cases and controls. Association between the polymorphism and the susceptibility to cervical cancer was evaluated using unconditional logistic regression analysis.

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