4.6 Article

Characterization of the COPD Salivary Fingerprint through Surface Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy: A Pilot Study

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics11030508

Keywords

SERS; COPD; multivariate analysis; saliva

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health, Ricerca Corrente 2020

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The study applied Surface Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy combined with Multivariate statistics to analyze saliva samples from 15 COPD patients and 15 healthy subjects, identifying specific differences in pathological saliva compared to healthy saliva. By utilizing linear discriminant analysis, a classification model was developed with high accuracy, specificity, and sensitivity for distinguishing between the two groups. These promising results suggest potential further applications of Raman spectroscopy in the clinical field of COPD.
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a debilitating pathology characterized by reduced lung function, breathlessness and rapid and unrelenting decrease in quality of life. The severity rate and the therapy selection are strictly dependent on various parameters verifiable after years of clinical observations, missing a direct biomarker associated with COPD. In this work, we report the methodological application of Surface Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy combined with Multivariate statistics for the analysis of saliva samples collected from 15 patients affected by COPD and 15 related healthy subjects in a pilot study. The comparative Raman analysis allowed to determine a specific signature of the pathological saliva, highlighting differences in determined biological species, already studied and characterized in COPD onset, compared to the Raman signature of healthy samples. The unsupervised principal component analysis and hierarchical clustering revealed a sharp data dispersion between the two experimental groups. Using the linear discriminant analysis, we created a classification model able to discriminate the collected signals with accuracies, specificities, and sensitivities of more than 98%. The results of this preliminary study are promising for further applications of Raman spectroscopy in the COPD clinical field.

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