“…First described by Lee et al in 1993 [145], miRNAs have a key role in cancer proliferation, with the clinical utility of prognostic, diagnostic and therapeutic avenues being explored through measuring miRNA expression profiles [146,147]. Increased Ki-67 correlates with aggressive, highly proliferative disease, and efforts have been made to augment Ki-67 indices through supplementation with miRNA expression data: Sakurai et al performed hierarchical cluster analyses to elicit correlations between low, intermediate, and high levels of Ki-67 expression and miRNA expression [148]. Low Ki-67 expression was considered with scores of 0-14% (control group), and nine miRNAs were overexpressed in this group: miR-let-7a, miR-let-7b, miR-let-7e, miR-29a, miR-143, miR-181a, miR-214, miR-218, and small non-coding molecule, SNORD48.…”