4.5 Review

Emerging technologies for salivaomics in cancer detection

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Volume 21, Issue 4, Pages 640-647

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jcmm.13007

Keywords

salivary diagnostics; cancer; RNA-Sequencing; point-of-care; liquid biopsy

Funding

  1. Public Health Service (PHS) grants from the National Institute of Health/National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIH/NIDCR) in United States [UH3 TR000923, R90 DE022734, 5R90DE023057-03, U01 DE17593]
  2. Colgate-Palmolive Company [20130399, 20140855]
  3. Delta Dental grants [20143014, 20164106]

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Salivary diagnostics has great potential to be used in the early detection and prevention of many cancerous diseases. If implemented with rigour and efficiency, it can result in improving patient survival times and achieving earlier diagnosis of disease. Recently, extraordinary efforts have been taken to develop non-invasive technologies that can be applied without complicated and expensive procedures. Saliva is a biofluid that has demonstrated excellent properties and can be used as a diagnostic fluid, since many of the biomarkers suggested for cancers can also be found in whole saliva, apart from blood or other body fluids. The currently accepted gold standard methods for biomarker development include chromatography, mass spectometry, gel electrophoresis, microarrays and polymerase chain reaction-based quantification. However, salivary diagnostics is a flourishing field with the rapid development of novel technologies associated with point-of-care diagnostics, RNA sequencing, electrochemical detection and liquid biopsy. Those technologies will help introduce population-based screening programs, thus enabling early detection, prognosis assessment and disease monitoring. The purpose of this review is to give a comprehensive update on the emerging diagnostic technologies and tools for the early detection of cancerous diseases based on saliva.

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