A biospectroscopic approach toward colorectal cancer diagnosis from bodily fluid samples via ATR–MIR spectroscopy combined with multivariate data analysis

[Display omitted] •The study highlighted the rapid diagnosis of colon cancer from different bodily fluids.•Bodily fluids were analyzed by ATR–MIR spectroscopy combined with chemometrics.•100% of the samples were correctly discriminated on the basis of their origin by LDA.•The findings showed the imp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Spectrochimica acta. Part A, Molecular and biomolecular spectroscopy Molecular and biomolecular spectroscopy, 2024-01, Vol.304, p.123342, Article 123342
Hauptverfasser: Tugrul, Fuzuli, Akin Geyik, Gonul, Yalinbaş Kaya, Berrin, Peker Cengiz, Betul, Karuk Elmas, Sukriye Nihan, Yilmaz, Ibrahim, Arslan, Fatma Nur
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •The study highlighted the rapid diagnosis of colon cancer from different bodily fluids.•Bodily fluids were analyzed by ATR–MIR spectroscopy combined with chemometrics.•100% of the samples were correctly discriminated on the basis of their origin by LDA.•The findings showed the importance of biospectroscopic approaches in real cases. In this study, a biospectroscopic approach was reported for the detection of spectral changes and biomarkers for the diagnosis of colorectal cancer (CC) cases from different bodily fluids (blood plasma, blood serum, saliva and colonoscopy disinfection/wash fluids) by using attenuated total reflection–mid infrared (ATR–MIR) spectroscopy. To recognize the molecular level changes in the spectral characteristics of CC and their healthy/control (CH) groups, different multivariate data analyses (HCA, LDA, PCA and SIMCA) were successfully performed over the data of ATR–MIR spectroscopy. Two hundred specimens were characterized in detail over the data of spectral regions (4000–650 cm−1 and regions V–XXII). The findings revealed that significant changes were clearly observed in the concentrations of lipid, protein, nucleic acid and carbohydrate biomolecules for cancer cases based upon their necessity to overcome energy requirements. Supervised multivariate data methodology SIMCA, presented an excellent classification for the studied groups; similarly 100% of the specimens from different bodily fluids were correctly classified by supervised methodology LDA. As a result, the developed ATR–MIR methodology for the classification of CC and their healthy groups highlighted a rapid cancer diagnosis approach from different bodily fluids; therefore, it could be guide to make well decision before histopathological assessment and to screen CC populations existing in society.
ISSN:1386-1425
DOI:10.1016/j.saa.2023.123342