The mass spectrometry-based molecular profiling can be used for better differentiation between normal and cancer tissues and for the detection of neoplastic transformation, which is of great importance for diagnostics of a pathology, prognosis of its evolution trend, and development of a treatment strategy. The aim of the present study is the evaluation of tissue classification approaches based on various data sets derived from the molecular profile of the organic solvent extracts of a tissue. A set of possibilities are considered for the orthogonal projections to latent structures discriminant analysis: all mass spectrometric peaks over 300 counts threshold, subset of peaks selected by ranking with support vector machine algorithm, peaks selected by random forest algorithm, peaks with the statistically significant difference of the intensity determined by the Mann-Whitney U test, peaks identified as lipids, and both identified and significantly different peaks. The best predictive potential is obtained for OPLS-DA model built on nonpolar glycerolipids (Q 2 = 0.64, area under curve [AUC] = 0.95); the second one is OPLS-DA model with lipid peaks selected by random forest algorithm (Q 2 = 0.58, AUC = 0.87). Moreover, models based on particular molecular classes are more preferable from biological point of view, resulting in new explanatory mechanisms of pathophysiology and providing a pathway analysis. Another promising features for OPLS-DA modeling are phosphatidylethanolamines (Q 2 = 0.48, AUC = 0.86). Journal of MASS SPECTROMETRY 4 | CONCLUSION ESI-MS shotgun lipidomics of a tissue takes about 25 minutes including sample preparation. It is somewhat faster than the common cervical cancer identification methods such as histology and can give significantly more information. Thus, it has a potential for precise and personalized characterization of cancer as a supplement for histological examination. Influence of pre-analytical experimental data processing on the classification model predictive potential is analyzed.The OPLS-DA model based on nonpolar glycerolipids demonstrated the best predictive power. These data sets together with ethanolamines are the most promising for tissue classification among the data bearing essential biochemical information.
Current methods for the intraoperative determination of breast cancer margins commonly suffer from the insufficient accuracy, specificity and/or low speed of analysis, increasing the time and cost of operation as well the risk of cancer recurrence. The purpose of this study is to develop a method for the rapid and accurate determination of breast cancer margins using direct molecular profiling by mass spectrometry (MS). Direct molecular fingerprinting of tiny pieces of breast tissue (approximately 1 × 1 × 1 mm) is performed using a home-built tissue spray ionization source installed on a Maxis Impact quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer (qTOF MS) (Bruker Daltonics, Hamburg, Germany). Statistical analysis of MS data from 50 samples of both normal and cancer tissue (from 25 patients) was performed using orthogonal projections onto latent structures discriminant analysis (OPLS-DA). Additionally, the results of OPLS classification of new 19 pieces of two tissue samples were compared with the results of histological analysis performed on the same tissues samples. The average time of analysis for one sample was about 5 min. Positive and negative ionization modes are used to provide complementary information and to find out the most informative method for a breast tissue classification. The analysis provides information on 11 lipid classes. OPLS-DA models are created for the classification of normal and cancer tissue based on the various datasets: All mass spectrometric peaks over 300 counts; peaks with a statistically significant difference of intensity determined by the Mann–Whitney U-test (p < 0.05); peaks identified as lipids; both identified and significantly different peaks. The highest values of Q2 have models built on all MS peaks and on significantly different peaks. While such models are useful for classification itself, they are of less value for building explanatory mechanisms of pathophysiology and providing a pathway analysis. Models based on identified peaks are preferable from this point of view. Results obtained by OPLS-DA classification of the tissue spray MS data of a new sample set (n = 19) revealed 100% sensitivity and specificity when compared to histological analysis, the “gold” standard for tissue classification. “All peaks” and “significantly different peaks” datasets in the positive ion mode were ideal for breast cancer tissue classification. Our results indicate the potential of tissue spray mass spectrometry for rapid, accurate and intraoperative diagnostics of breast cancer tissue as a means to reduce surgical intervention.
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