Abstract

Until now, the classification system of oral epithelial dysplasia is still based on the architectural and cytological changes, which relies on the observation of pathologists and is relatively subjective. The purpose of present research was to discriminate the oral dysplasia by the near-infrared Raman spectroscope, in order to evaluate the classification system. We collected Raman spectra of normal mucosa, oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) and dysplasia by near-infrared Raman spectroscope. The biochemical variations between different stages were analyzed by the characteristic peaks in the subtracted mean spectra. Gaussian radial basis function support vector machines (SVM) were used to establish the diagnostic models. At the same time, principal component analysis (PCA) and linear discriminant analysis (LDA) were used to verify the results of SVM. Raman spectral differences were observed in the range between 730~1913 cm-1. Compared with normal mucosa, high contents of protein and DNA in oral dysplasia and OSCC were observed. There were no significant or gradual variation of Raman peaks among different dysplastic grades. The accuracies of comparison between mild, moderate, severe dysplasia with OSCC were 100%, 44.44%, 71.15%, which elucidated the low modeling ability of support vector machines, especially for the moderate dysplasia. The analysis by PCA-LDA could not discriminate the stages, either. Combined with support vector machines, near-infrared Raman spectroscopy could detect the biochemical variations in oral normal, OSCC and dysplastic tissues, but could not establish diagnostic model accurately. The classification system needs further improvements.

Highlights

  • Dysplastic features of the oral epithelium are characterized by cellular atypia and loss of normal maturation and stratification [1]

  • The classification system of oral epithelial dysplasia is still based on the architectural and cytological changes, which relies on the observation of pathologists and is relatively subjective

  • The biochemical variations between different stages were analyzed by the characteristic peaks in the subtracted mean spectra

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Summary

Introduction

Dysplastic features of the oral epithelium are characterized by cellular atypia and loss of normal maturation and stratification [1]. The presence of dysplastic areas in the oral mucosa is believed to be associated with the progression to cancer. The severer the dysplasia is, the greater the likelihood of progression to malignancy in an individual lesion is. Non-dysplastic lesions may show malignant development [2, 3]. Presence and severity of dysplasia cannot be used as a reliable guide for the treatment of individual cases. The crude relationship between grading dysplasia and risk of progression to malignancy makes dysplasia grading necessary [4]

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