Abstract

Bladder cancer (BC) is the second most prevalent malignancy in the urinary system and is associated with significant mortality; thus, there is an urgent need for novel noninvasive diagnostic biomarkers. A urinary pseudotargeted method based on gas chromatography–mass spectrometry was developed and validated for a BC metabolomics study. The method exhibited good repeatability, intraday and interday precision, linearity and metabolome coverage. A total of 76 differential metabolites were defined in the discovery sample set, 58 of which were verified using an independent validation urine set. The verified differential metabolites revealed that energy metabolism, anabolic metabolism and cell redox states were disordered in BC. Based on a binary logistic regression analysis, a four-biomarker panel was defined for the diagnosis of BC. The area under the receiving operator characteristic curve was 0.885 with 88.0% sensitivity and 85.7% specificity in the discovery set and 0.804 with 78.0% sensitivity and 70.3% specificity in the validation set. The combinatorial biomarker panel was also useful for the early diagnosis of BC. This approach can be used to discriminate non-muscle invasive and low-grade BCs from healthy controls with satisfactory sensitivity and specificity. The results show that the developed urinary metabolomics method can be employed to effectively screen noninvasive biomarkers.

Highlights

  • Bladder cancer (BC) is the second most prevalent malignancy in the urinary system [1] and is associated with significant mortality worldwide [2]

  • Bladder cancer (BC) is the second most prevalent malignancy in the urinary system and is associated with significant mortality; there is an urgent need for novel noninvasive diagnostic biomarkers

  • A urinary pseudotargeted method based on gas chromatography–mass spectrometry was developed and validated for a BC metabolomics study

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Bladder cancer (BC) is the second most prevalent malignancy in the urinary system [1] and is associated with significant mortality worldwide [2]. A urinary pseudotargeted method based on gas chromatography–mass spectrometry was developed and validated for a BC metabolomics study. A total of 76 differential metabolites were defined in the discovery sample set, 58 of which were verified using an independent validation urine set.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call