Raman spectroscopy of blood and urine liquid biopsies for ovarian cancer diagnosis: identification of chemotherapy effects.

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2021
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Abstract
Blood plasma and serum Raman spectroscopy for ovarian cancer diagnosis has been applied in pilot studies, with promising results. Herein, a comparative analysis of these biofluids, with a novel assessment of urine, was conducted by Raman spectroscopy application in a large patient cohort. Spectra were obtained through samples measurements from 116 ovarian cancer patients and 307 controls. Principal component analysis identified significant spectral differences between cancers without previous treatment (n=71) and following neo-adjuvant chemotherapy - NACT (n=45). Application of five classification algorithms achieved up to 73% sensitivity for plasma, high specificities and accuracies for both blood biofluids, and lower performance for urine. A drop in sensitivities for the NACT group in plasma and serum, with an opposite trend in urine, suggest that Raman spectroscopy could identify chemotherapy-related changes. This study confirms that biofluids' Raman spectroscopy can contribute in ovarian cancer's diagnostic work-up and demonstrates its potential in monitoring treatment response. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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Authors Giamougiannis, Panagiotis;Silva, Raissa V O;Freitas, Daniel L D;Lima, Kássio M G;Anagnostopoulos, Antonios;Angelopoulos, Georgios;Naik, Raj;Wood, Nicholas J;Martin-Hirsch, Pierre L;Martin, Francis L;
Journal Journal of biophotonics
Year 2021
DOI
10.1002/jbio.202100195
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