Identification of salivary metabolomic biomarkers for oral cancer screening

The objective of this study was to explore salivary metabolite biomarkers by profiling both saliva and tumor tissue samples for oral cancer screening. Paired tumor and control tissues were obtained from oral cancer patients and whole unstimulated saliva samples were collected from patients and healt...

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Published inScientific reports Vol. 6; no. 1; p. 31520
Main Authors Ishikawa, Shigeo, Sugimoto, Masahiro, Kitabatake, Kenichiro, Sugano, Ayako, Nakamura, Marina, Kaneko, Miku, Ota, Sana, Hiwatari, Kana, Enomoto, Ayame, Soga, Tomoyoshi, Tomita, Masaru, Iino, Mitsuyoshi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 19.08.2016
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:The objective of this study was to explore salivary metabolite biomarkers by profiling both saliva and tumor tissue samples for oral cancer screening. Paired tumor and control tissues were obtained from oral cancer patients and whole unstimulated saliva samples were collected from patients and healthy controls. The comprehensive metabolomic analysis for profiling hydrophilic metabolites was conducted using capillary electrophoresis time-of-flight mass spectrometry. In total, 85 and 45 metabolites showed significant differences between tumor and matched control samples and between salivary samples from oral cancer and controls, respectively ( P  < 0.05 correlated by false discovery rate); 17 metabolites showed consistent differences in both saliva and tissue-based comparisons. Of these, a combination of only two biomarkers yielded a high area under receiver operating characteristic curves (0.827; 95% confidence interval, 0.726–0.928, P  < 0.0001) for discriminating oral cancers from controls. Various validation tests confirmed its high generalization ability. The demonstrated approach, integrating both saliva and tumor tissue metabolomics, helps eliminate pseudo-molecules that are coincidentally different between oral cancers and controls. These combined salivary metabolites could be the basis of a clinically feasible method of non-invasive oral cancer screening.
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ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/srep31520