Canine cancer screening via ultraviolet absorbance and fluorescence spectroscopy of serum proteins

A cost-effective optical cancer screening and monitoring technique was demonstrated in a pilot study of canine serum samples and was patented for commercialization. Compared to conventional blood chemistry analysis methods, more accurate estimations of the concentrations of albumin, globulins, and h...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied Optics 2007-11, Vol.46 (33), p.8080-8088
Hauptverfasser: Dickerson, Bryan D, Geist, Brian L, Spillman, Jr, William B, Robertson, John L
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container_end_page 8088
container_issue 33
container_start_page 8080
container_title Applied Optics
container_volume 46
creator Dickerson, Bryan D
Geist, Brian L
Spillman, Jr, William B
Robertson, John L
description A cost-effective optical cancer screening and monitoring technique was demonstrated in a pilot study of canine serum samples and was patented for commercialization. Compared to conventional blood chemistry analysis methods, more accurate estimations of the concentrations of albumin, globulins, and hemoglobin in serum were obtained by fitting the near UV absorbance and photoluminescence spectra of diluted serum as a linear combination of component reference spectra. Tracking these serum proteins over the course of treatment helped to monitor patient immune response to carcinoma and therapy. For cancer screening, 70% of dogs with clinical presentation of cancer displayed suppressed serum hemoglobin levels (below 20 mg/dL) in combination with atypical serum protein compositions, that is, albumin levels outside of a safe range (from 4 to 8 g/dL) and globulin levels above or below a more normal range (from 1.7 to 3.7 g/dL). Of the dogs that met these criteria, only 20% were given a false positive label by this cancer screening test.
doi_str_mv 10.1364/AO.46.008080
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source MEDLINE; Alma/SFX Local Collection; Optica Publishing Group Journals
subjects Animals
Biomarkers, Tumor - blood
Blood Chemical Analysis - methods
Blood Proteins - analysis
Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted - methods
Dogs
Neoplasm Proteins - blood
Neoplasms - blood
Neoplasms - diagnosis
Reproducibility of Results
Sensitivity and Specificity
Spectrometry, Fluorescence - methods
Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet - methods
title Canine cancer screening via ultraviolet absorbance and fluorescence spectroscopy of serum proteins
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