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Vol 55(2021) N 6 p. 941-949; DOI 10.1134/S0026893321050137 H.N.N. Thu1, H.T.N. Vy1, T.N.N. Thanh2, D.T.N. Giang1, T.N. Nhan1, N.P. Hoang1, T.N. Hue2* miRNA-16 AS an Internal Control in Breast Cancer Studies: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis 1Vietnam National University, Ho Chi Minh City, 70000 Vietnam2Department of Physiology and Animal Biotechnology, Faculty of Biology and Biotechnology, University of Science, Ho Chi Minh City, 70000 Vietnam *nthue@hcmus.edu.vn Received - 2020-12-12; Revised - 2021-02-10; Accepted - 2021-02-24 Reverse Transcription quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-qPCR) is a method of choice for quantifying micro RNAs (miRNAs). Typically, RT-qPCR data are normalized to reference genes. While miRNAs are used for diagnosing and subtyping breast cancer, various studies show their deregulation in this condition, thus, undermining miRNAs' utility as a reference. This review examines the expression pattern of miR-16 and suggests normalization approaches for breast cancer. We analyzed the data from selected peer-reviewed studies to calculate the standardized mean difference (SMD) with subsequent Chi-square testing and identified the difference in miR-16 expression between breast cancer patients and healthy controls. With a negative SMD value of-0.56 and Chi-square of 62.62 (p-value = 0.05), the deregulation of miR-16 in breast cancer was confirmed. High variance in the stability value (SV) of miR-16 expression levels confirmed its inappropriateness as a control gene in breast cancer. The combination of miR-16 and miR-425 was confirmed as an accurate endogenous control. breast cancer, miR-16, internal control, combined control genes |