American Association for Cancer Research
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Supplementary Table 1 from Real-time Raman Spectroscopy for In Vivo Skin Cancer Diagnosis

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posted on 2023-03-30, 21:08 authored by Harvey Lui, Jianhua Zhao, David McLean, Haishan Zeng

PDF file - 99K, Diagnostic concordance between clinical (pre-biopsy) versus histopathologic (post-biopsy) diagnoses for biopsied skin lesions (n=291).

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ARTICLE ABSTRACT

Raman spectroscopy is a noninvasive optical technique capable of measuring vibrational modes of biomolecules within viable tissues. In this study, we evaluated the application of an integrated real-time system of Raman spectroscopy for in vivo skin cancer diagnosis. Benign and malignant skin lesions (n = 518) from 453 patients were measured within 1 second each, including melanomas, basal cell carcinomas, squamous cell carcinomas, actinic keratoses, atypical nevi, melanocytic nevi, blue nevi, and seborrheic keratoses. Lesion classification was made using a principal component with general discriminant analysis and partial least-squares in three distinct discrimination tasks: skin cancers and precancers from benign skin lesions [receiver operating characteristic (ROC) = 0.879]; melanomas from nonmelanoma pigmented lesions (ROC = 0.823); and melanomas from seborrheic keratoses (ROC = 0.898). For sensitivities between 95% and 99%, the specificities ranged between 15% and 54%. Our findings establish that real-time Raman spectroscopy can be used to distinguish malignant from benign skin lesions with good diagnostic accuracy comparable with clinical examination and other optical-based methods. Cancer Res; 72(10); 2491–500. ©2012 AACR.

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