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The use of a gas chromatography-sensor system combined with advanced statistical methods, towards the diagnosis of urological malignancies

Aggio, Raphael B M; De Lacy Costello, Ben; White, Paul; Khalid, Tanzeela; Ratcliffe, Norman M; Persad, Raj; Probert, Chris S J

Authors

Raphael B M Aggio

Paul White Paul.White@uwe.ac.uk
Professor in Applied Statistics

Tanzeela Khalid

Norman Ratcliffe Norman.Ratcliffe@uwe.ac.uk
Professor in Materials & Sensors Science

Raj Persad

Chris S J Probert



Abstract

© 2016 IOP Publishing Ltd. Prostate cancer is one of the most common cancers. Serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is used to aid the selection of men undergoing biopsies. Its use remains controversial. We propose a GC-sensor algorithm system for classifying urine samples from patients with urological symptoms. This pilot study includes 155 men presenting to urology clinics, 58 were diagnosed with prostate cancer, 24 with bladder cancer and 73 with haematuria and or poor stream, without cancer. Principal component analysis (PCA) was applied to assess the discrimination achieved, while linear discriminant analysis (LDA) and support vector machine (SVM) were used as statistical models for sample classification. Leave-one-out cross-validation (LOOCV), repeated 10-fold cross-validation (10FoldCV), repeated double cross-validation (DoubleCV) and Monte Carlo permutations were applied to assess performance. Significant separation was found between prostate cancer and control samples, bladder cancer and controls and between bladder and prostate cancer samples. For prostate cancer diagnosis, the GC/SVM system classified samples with 95% sensitivity and 96% specificity after LOOCV. For bladder cancer diagnosis, the SVM reported 96% sensitivity and 100% specificity after LOOCV, while the DoubleCV reported 87% sensitivity and 99% specificity, with SVM showing 78% and 98% sensitivity between prostate and bladder cancer samples. Evaluation of the results of the Monte Carlo permutation of class labels obtained chance-like accuracy values around 50% suggesting the observed results for bladder cancer and prostate cancer detection are not due to over fitting. The results of the pilot study presented here indicate that the GC system is able to successfully identify patterns that allow classification of urine samples from patients with urological cancers. An accurate diagnosis based on urine samples would reduce the number of negative prostate biopsies performed, and the frequency of surveillance cystoscopy for bladder cancer patients. Larger cohort studies are planned to investigate the potential of this system. Future work may lead to non-invasive breath analyses for diagnosing urological conditions.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 5, 2015
Online Publication Date Feb 11, 2016
Publication Date Feb 11, 2016
Journal Journal of Breath Research
Print ISSN 1752-7155
Electronic ISSN 1752-7163
Publisher IOP Publishing
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 10
Issue 1
Article Number 017106
DOI https://doi.org/10.1088/1752-7155/10/1/017106
Keywords chromatography-sensor, statistics, urological malignancies
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/916181
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1752-7155/10/1/017106
Related Public URLs http://europepmc.org/abstract/MED/26865331