1 research outputs found
Noninvasive Diagnosis of High-Grade Urothelial Carcinoma in Urine by Raman Spectral Imaging
The current gold
standard for the diagnosis of bladder cancer is
cystoscopy, which is invasive and painful for patients. Therefore,
noninvasive urine cytology is usually used in the clinic as an adjunct
to cystoscopy; however, it suffers from low sensitivity. Here, a novel
noninvasive, label-free approach with high sensitivity for use with
urine is presented. Coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering imaging
of urine sediments was used in the first step for fast preselection
of urothelial cells, where high-grade urothelial cancer cells are
characterized by a large nucleus-to-cytoplasm ratio. In the second
step, Raman spectral imaging of urothelial cells was performed. A
supervised classifier was implemented to automatically differentiate
normal and cancerous urothelial cells with 100% accuracy. In addition,
the Raman spectra not only indicated the morphological changes that
are identified by cytology with hematoxylin and eosin staining but
also provided molecular resolution through the use of specific marker
bands. The respective Raman marker bands directly show a decrease
in the level of glycogen and an increase in the levels of fatty acids
in cancer cells as compared to controls. These results pave the way
for “spectral” cytology of urine using Raman microspectroscopy