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Dive into the research topics where Rashid Mir is active.

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Featured researches published by Rashid Mir.


Clinical & Translational Oncology | 2015

Erratum to : Expression of serum miR-200a, miR-200b and miR-200c as candidate biomarkers in epithelial ovarian cancer and their association with clinicopathological features

Mariyam Zuberi; Rashid Mir; J. Das; Imtiyaz Ahmad; Jamsheed Javid; Prasant Yadav; Mirza Masroor; S. Ahmad; P. C. Ray; Alpana Saxena

Background MicroRNAs (miRs) have been implicated in the etiology of various human cancers. The aim of this study was to investigate the association of the expression of three members—miR 200a, miR 200b, and miR 200c belonging to the miR-200 family with clinicopathological characteristics and their impact on the progression of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC).


Indian Journal of Pathology & Microbiology | 2009

Hemoglobin color scale a diagnostic dilemma

Hema Anand; Rashid Mir; Renu Saxena

Hemoglobin color scale (HCS) is a commercially available test to screen anaemia in the absence of laboratory based hemoglobinometry. The present study was aimed at to compare the efficacy of HCS with Sahlis method (SM) for haemoglobin estimation and to estimate its sensitivity and specificity with respect to auto analyzer as the gold standard. The study was conducted from November 2006 to April 2007 at the department of hematology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi as a project of World Health Organization. The haemoglobin level was measured by all the three methods in 401 patients attending Haematology out patient department. Consent was taken from all the patients. Sensitivity of Sahlis method was 98.2% and specificity was 66.2%, whereas the sensitivity of HCS was 30% and specificity was 100%. Sahlis method was found to be in good agreement with autoanalyzer (gold standard). It was thus concluded that HCS is not as efficacious, as sahils method for hemoglobin estimations in field.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Utility of Serum miR-125b as a Diagnostic and Prognostic Indicator and Its Alliance with a Panel of Tumor Suppressor Genes in Epithelial Ovarian Cancer

Mariyam Zuberi; Imran Khan; Rashid Mir; Gauri Gandhi; Prakash Chandra Ray; Alpana Saxena

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been found to be dysregulated in epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) and may function as either tumor suppressor genes (TSGs) or as oncogenes. Hypermethylation of miRNA silences the tumour suppressive function of a miRNA or hypermethylation of a TSG regulating that miRNA (or vice versa) leads to its loss of function. The present study aims to evaluate the impact of aberrant microRNA-125b (miR-125b) expression on various clinicopathological features in epithelial ovarian cancer and its association with anomalous methylation of several TSGs. We enrolled 70 newly diagnosed cases of epithelial ovarian cancer, recorded their clinical history and 70 healthy female volunteers. Serum miR-125b levels were determined by quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) and the methylation status of various TSGs was investigated by methylation specific PCR. ROC curves were constructed to estimate the diagnostic and prognostic usefulness of miR-125b. The Kaplan—Meier method was applied to compare survival curves. Expression of miR-125b was found to be significantly upregulated (p<0.0001) in comparison with healthy controls. The expression level of miR-125b was found to be significantly associated with FIGO stage, lymph node and distant metastasis. ROC curve for diagnostic potential yielded significant AUC with an equitable sensitivity and specificity. ROC curves for prognosis yielded significant AUCs for histological grade, distal metastasis, lymph node status and survival. The expression of miR-125b also correlated significantly with the hypermethylation of TSGs. Our results indicate that DNA hypermethylation may be involved in the inactivation of miR-125b and miR-125b may function as a potential independent biomarker for clinical outcome in EOC.


Tumor Biology | 2015

Extracellular cytochrome c as a biomarker for monitoring therapeutic efficacy and prognosis of non-small cell lung cancer patients

Jamsheed Javid; Rashid Mir; P. K. Julka; P. C. Ray; Alpana Saxena

Non-small cell lung cancer has a devastating prognosis, and markers enabling a precise prediction of therapy response have long remained scarce. Better treatment monitoring would allow an individual’s more effective patient adjusted therapy with lesser side effects and good clinical outcomes. In the present study, we monitored the serum cytochrome c levels pre- and post-chemotherapy of non-small cell lung cancer patients. Using highly sensitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, we evaluated cytochrome c levels in serum of 100 non-small cell lung cancer and 100 healthy controls. We observed about threefold lower serum cytochrome c level in newly diagnosed non-small cell lung cancer patients than healthy individuals. Patients in advanced stages and grade 3 histological differentiation showed significantly low level of serum cytochrome c, and the lower levels were associated with worse survival outcome of non-small cell lung cancer patients. In addition, serum cytochrome c level was observed to be more than 13-fold higher after first cycle of conventional chemotherapy, wherein patients with higher level of serum cytochrome c before any therapy showed better response to chemotherapy in terms of significantly higher level of serum cytochrome c after first cycle of chemotherapy than patients with low level of serum cytochrome c at the time of diagnosis. Detection of serum cytochrome c levels at the time of diagnosis may be useful in suggesting disease severity and prognosis of the non-small cell lung cancer patients. Monitoring of serum cytochrome c might also serve as a sensitive apoptotic marker in vivo reflecting chemotherapy-induced cell death burden in patients with non-small cell lung cancer.


Journal of Cancer Science & Therapy | 2013

Epigenetic Silencing of DAPK1 Gene is Associated with Faster Disease Progression in India Populations with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia

Rashid Mir; Imtiyaz Ahmad; Jamsheed Javid; Shazia Farooq; Prasant Yadav; Mariyam Zuberi; Mirza Masroor; Sameer Guru; Ajaz Ahmad Bhat; Tanveer Ah khatlani; Naresh Gupta; P. C. Ray; Alpana Saxena

Background: One of the major epigenetic changes in human cancer is DNA methylation of tumour suppressor genes which leads to silencing of gene leading to disease progression. Therefore, DNA methylation status of such genes may serve as the epigenetic biomarker for prognosis of human Chronic Myeloid Leukemia. Material and methods: We used MSP-PCR technique for the analysis of aberrant promoter DAPK1 methylation on 200 CML venous blood samples. Stastical analysis was done for evaluating differences between different parameters using SPSS 16.0 version. Results: We could detect 91/200 promoter methylation (45.5%) in CML patients. Percentage of methylation detected was seen higher in blast phase (63.07%) and in accelerated phase (48.1%) than in chronic phase (29.6%). A significant correlation was seen between CML stages and DAPK1 aberrant methylation. We also found a significant association of DAPK1 methylation in gender and in haematological resistance CML patients. However no correlation was found between DAPK1 promoter methylation and other clinical parameters like age, BCR-ABL type and Thrombocytopenia. Conclusion: In summary we concluded that methylation status of DAPK1 gene is associated with advanced phase of CML and may be related to disease progression in chronic myeloid leukemia. Further study on a more number of patients is needed to explore the role of DAPK1 methylation in the prognosis of CML.


Indian Journal of Cancer | 2015

Simple multiplex RT-PCR for identifying common fusion BCR-ABL transcript types and evaluation of molecular response of the a2b2 and a2b3 transcripts to Imatinib resistance in north Indian chronic myeloid leukemia patients.

Rashid Mir; Imtiyaz Ahmad; Jamsheed Javid; Mariyam Zuberi; Prasant Yadav; R Shazia; Mirza Masroor; Sameer Guru; P. C. Ray; Naresh Gupta; Alpana Saxena

INTRODUCTION Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is characterized by the Philadelphia chromosome, an abnormally shortened chromosome 22. It is the result of a reciprocal translocation of chromosomes 9 and 22, creating BCR-ABL fusion transcripts, b3a2, b2a2, and e1a2. The aim of our study was to determine the type of BCR-ABL fusion transcripts for molecular diagnosis and investigate the frequency of BCR-ABL fusion transcripts in CML patients by multiplex RT-PCR in CML. MATERIALS AND METHODS A single reaction with multiple primers multiplex PCR was used to detect and investigate the type and frequency in 200 CML patients among which 116, 33, and 51 were in CP, AP, and BC phase, respectively. RESULTS The study included 200 CML patients, among whom breakpoints in b3a2, b2a2 transcripts were detected in 68% and 24%, respectively, while 8% of the patients showed both b3a2/b2a2. A statistically significant difference was seen between frequency of BCR-ABL fusion transcripts and gender (P = 0.03), molecular response (P = 0.04), and hematological response (P = 0.05). However, there was no correlation found between frequencies of BCR-/ABL fusion transcripts and other clinicopathological parameters like age, type of therapy, thrombocytopenia, and white blood cell count. CONCLUSION Multiplex reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction is useful and saves time in the detection of BCR-ABL variants; the occurrence of these transcripts associated with CML can assist in prognosis and treatment of disease.


Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention | 2015

Clinical Implication of EGF A61G Polymorphism in the Risk of Non Small Cell Lung Adenocarcinoma Patients: A Case Control Study

Mirza Masroor; Jain Amit; Jamsheed Javid; Rashid Mir; Y Prasant; A Imtiyaz; Z Mariyam; Anant Mohan; P. C. Ray; Alpana Saxena

BACKGROUND The epidermal growth factor (EGF) plays important roles in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) susceptibility and functional polymorphism in the EGF (+61A/G) gene has been linked to increased risk of NSCLC. This study aimed to evaluate the role of the EGF +61A/G polymorphism in risk of NSCLC adenocarcinoma (ADC) occurrence and survival in an Indian population. MATERIALS AND METHODS This case- control study included 100 histopathologically confirmed NSCLC (ADC) patients and 100 healthy controls. EGF (A61G) was genotyped by AS-PCR to elucidate putative associations with clinical outcomes. The association of the polymorphism with the survival of NSCLC patients was estimated by Kaplan-Meier curves. RESULTS It was found that EGF 61AG heterozygous and GG homozygous genotype is significantly associated with increased risk of NSCLC (ADC) occurrence compared to AA genotype, [OR 2.61 (1.31-5.18) and 3.25 (1.31-8.06), RR 1.51(1.15-2.0) and 1.72 (1.08-2.73) and RD 23.2 (6.90-39.5) and 28.53(7.0-50.1) for heterozygous AG (p=0.005) and homozygous GG (p=0.009)]. Patients homozygous for the G allele exhibited a significantly poor overall survival. The median survival time for patients with EGF 61 AA, AG, and GG genotypes was 10.5, 7.4, and 7.1 months (p=0.02), respectively. NSCLC (ADC) patients with GG + AG exhibited 7.3 months median survival compared to the AA genotype (p=0.009). CONCLUSIONS The present study revealed that the EGF A61G genotype may be a novel independent prognostic marker to identify patients at higher risk of occurrence and an unfavourable clinical outcome.


Journal of Cancer Science & Therapy | 2013

Inactivation of RIZ1 Gene by Promoter Hypermethylation is Associated with Disease Progression and Resistance to Imatinib in Indian Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia Patients, First Study from India

Imtiyaz Ahmad; Rashid Mir; Mariyam Zuberi; Jamsheed Javid; Prasant Yadav; Shazia Farooq; Mirza Masroor; Sameer Guru; Sheikh Shahnawaz; P. C. Ray; Ishfaq Ahmed Sheikh; Tanvir S. Khatlani; Ajaz Ah Bhat; Naresh Gupta; Sunita Jetly; Niyaz Ahmad; Alpana Saxena

Background: The epigenetic impact of DNA methylation in chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is not completely understood. RIZ1 expression and activity are reduced in many cancers. In CML, blastic transformation is associated with loss of heterozygosity in the region where RIZ1 is located. RIZ1 is a PR domain methyltransferase that methylates histone H3 lysine 9, a modification important for transcriptional repression. In CML blast crisis cell lines RIZ1 represses insulin-like growth factor-1 expression and autocrine signaling. Together these observations suggest that RIZ1 may have a role in the chronic phase to blast crisis transition in CML. Methods: To examine whether promoter methylation is involved in the disease development and progression of CML, we investigated promoter methylation status of RIZ1 gene in 100 chronic myeloid leukemia’s (CML) patients and 50 controls by MSP method. Results: The RIZ1 methylation was studied in 100 CML patients, 9 were cases were methylation positive cases, six of nine were in blastic phase, 2 in chronic phase and one patient in accelerated phase. It was seen that RIZ1 methylation was increased significantly from early to advanced phase. The higher frequency of RIZ1 methylation was reported in haematologically resistant cases (42% vs 2%) and molecularly resistant cases (16.77% vs 1.92%) than the responders. The higher frequency of RIZ1 methylation was found in CML patients who were treated with interferon initially followed by imatinib treatment. Also RIZ1 hypermethylation was associated with faster disease progression p<0.003 than the non methylated cases. No correlation was found between RIZ1 gene methylation with age, thrombocytopenia, types of bcr/abl transcripts of CML patients. Conclusion: We conclude that epigenetic silencing of RIZ1 gene is associated with CML progression and imatinib resistance. Early detection of RIZ1 methylation could be a predictive marker for imatinib resistance and disease progression in CML.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2017

A deletion polymorphism in the RIZ gene is associated with increased progression of imatinib treated chronic myeloid leukemia patients

Rashid Mir; Imtiyaz Najar; Sameer Guru; Jamsheed Javaid; Prasant Yadav; Mirza Masroor; Mariyam Zuberi; Shazia Farooq; Musadiq Ahmad Bhat; Naresh Gupta; P. C. Ray; Alpana Saxena

Abstract RIZ1 encodes a retinoblastoma (Rb)-interacting zinc finger protein, is commonly lost or expressed at reduced levels in cancer cells. The RIZ1 gene locus commonly undergoes LOH in many cancers. Here, we analyzed Proline insertion–deletion polymorphism at amino acid position 704 in the RIZ1 gene and its association with CML. The RIZ1 pro-704 LOH genotypes were determined by AS-PCR in 100 CML patients among which 50 were in CP-CML, 25 in AP-CML, and 25 in BC-CML. Pro704 ins/del polymorphism (LOH) was detected in 27% CML patients. Proline ins–ins homozygosity, del–del homozygosity and ins–del heterozygosity was detected in 9%, 18%, and 73% CML patients compared with 3%, 3%, and 94% in healthy controls, respectively (p < .0003). A four-fold increased risk was found to be associated del-del genotype. We found a statistically significant association between RIZ1 LOH and stage (p > .01) and hematological resistance (p > .001). However, there were no correlations found with other clinical parameters like age, gender, thrombocytopia, type of BCR–ABL, and molecular response. Our findings suggest that proline 704 del–del homozygosity phenotype can play an important role in progression of CML.


Journal of Cell Science and Therapy | 2013

Biological and Clinical Implications of Exon 8 P53 (R282W) GeneMutation in Relation to Development and Progression of Chronic MyeloidLeukaemia Patients in India Population

Rashid Mir; Mariyam Zuberi; Imtiyaz Ahmad; Jamsheed Javid; Prasant Yadav; Shazia Farooq; Mirza Masroor; Sameer Guru; Sheikh shanawaz; Ajaz Ah Bhat; Tanvir S. Khatlani; Sunita Jetly; P. C. Ray; Naresh Gupta; and Alpana Saxena

Background: TP53, located on chromosome 17p13, is one of the most mutated genes affecting many types of human cancers .To establish an association between the incidence of exon 8 p53 (R282W) gene and progression of the disease in CML and also to correlate the presence of mutation with the clinicopathological features of the disease. Methods: p53 status was investigated by studying mutations in the p53 gene at exon 8 region after confirming the diagnosis by BCR-ABL. 100 CML samples were analyzed using the Allele-Specific Oligonucleotide PCR assay. Mutations occurred in 58% of the cases in exon 8 codon 282 region of the p53 gene. C : T transitions occurred at a high frequency with a statistically significant result (p=0.03). Results: Of the 100 clinically confirmed specimens, 58% tested positive for the mutation. Also, the mutation was found to be higher in the progressed stages (88.2% in accelerated phase and 60.0% in blast crisis) of CML compared to the chronic stage (35.2%). A statistically significant association (p=0.001) was found between the occurrence of p53 R282W mutation and the clinical phase of CML with chronic, accelerated and blast crisis phases. The mutation was detected in a vast majority (88.2%) of patients in the accelerated and the blast crisis phase (60.0%) indicating that this mutation might play a critical role in predicting the progression of disease in CML. Clinicopathological correlation with TLC, platelet count and the haematological response elicited a significant association with patients harboring the mutation with (p=0.01), (p=0.001) and (p=0.01) respectively. Conclusion: Our study suggests that p53 mutations in the exon 8 region might have a strong influence on disease progression and poor response of imatiib (Tyrosine kinase inhibitor) in CML patients.

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Alpana Saxena

Maulana Azad Medical College

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Jamsheed Javid

Maulana Azad Medical College

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P. C. Ray

Maulana Azad Medical College

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Mariyam Zuberi

Maulana Azad Medical College

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Mirza Masroor

Maulana Azad Medical College

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Prasant Yadav

Maulana Azad Medical College

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Sameer Guru

Maulana Azad Medical College

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Imtiyaz Ahmad

Maulana Azad Medical College

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Shazia Farooq

Maulana Azad Medical College

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Naresh Gupta

Madigan Army Medical Center

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