A comparative analysis of different biofluids towards ovarian cancer diagnosis using Raman microspectroscopy

Giamougiannis, Panagiotis, Medeiros-De-morais, Camilo De lelis orcid iconORCID: 0000-0003-2573-787X, Grabowska, Rita, Ashton, Katherine, Wood, Nicholas, Martin-Hirsch, Pierre and Martin, Francis L orcid iconORCID: 0000-0001-8562-4944 (2020) A comparative analysis of different biofluids towards ovarian cancer diagnosis using Raman microspectroscopy. Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, 413 . pp. 911-922. ISSN 1618-2642

[thumbnail of Version of Record]
Preview
PDF (Version of Record) - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

2MB

Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00216-020-03045-1

Abstract

Biofluids, such as blood plasma or serum, are currently being evaluated for cancer detection using vibrational spectroscopy. These fluids contain information of key biomolecules, such as proteins, lipids, carbohydrates and nucleic acids that comprise spectrochemical patterns to differentiate samples. Raman is a water-free and practically non-destructive vibrational spectroscopy technique, capable of recording spectrochemical fingerprints of biofluids with minimum or no sample preparation. Herein, we compare the performance of these two common biofluids (blood plasma and serum) together with ascitic fluid, towards ovarian cancer detection using Raman microspectroscopy. Samples from thirty-eight patients were analysed (n=18 ovarian cancer patients, n=20 benign controls) through different spectral pre-processing and discriminant analysis techniques. Ascitic fluid provided the best class-separation in both unsupervised and supervised discrimination approaches, where classification accuracies, sensitivities and specificities above 80% were obtained, in comparison to 60% - 73% with plasma or serum. Ascitic fluid appears to be rich in collagen information responsible for distinguishing ovarian cancer samples, where collagen-signalling bands at 1004 cm-1 (phenylalanine), 1334 cm-1 (CH3CH2 wagging vibration), 1448 cm-1 (CH2 deformation) and 1657 cm-1 (Amide I) exhibited high statistical significance for class differentiation (P <0.001). The efficacy of vibrational spectroscopy, in particular Raman spectroscopy, combined with ascitic fluid analysis, suggests a potential diagnostic method for ovarian cancer.


Repository Staff Only: item control page