Optical Detection of Buccal Epithelial Nanoarchitectural Alterations in Patients Harboring Lung Cancer: Implications for Screening

Hemant K. Roy(Northwestern University), Hariharan Subramanian(Northwestern University), Dhwanil Damania(Northwestern University), Thomas A. Hensing(Northwestern University), William N. Rom(Northwestern University), Harvey I. Pass(Northwestern University), Daniel Ray(Northwestern University), Jeremy D. Rogers(Northwestern University), Andrej Bogojevic(Northwestern University), Maitri Shah(Northwestern University), Tomasz J. Kuźniar(Northwestern University), Prabhakar Pradhan(Northwestern University), Vadim Backman(Northwestern University)
Cancer Research
October 6, 2010
Cited by 67Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

We have recently developed a novel optical technology, partial wave spectroscopic (PWS) microscopy, which is exquisitely sensitive to the nanoarchitectural manifestation of the genetic/epigenetic alterations of field carcinogenesis. Our approach was to screen for lung cancer by assessing the cheek cells based on emerging genetic/epigenetic data which suggests that the buccal epithelium is altered in lung field carcinogenesis. We performed PWS analysis from microscopically normal buccal epithelial brushings from smokers with and without lung cancer (n = 135). The PWS parameter, disorder strength of cell nanoarchitecture (L(d)), was markedly (>50%) elevated in patients harboring lung cancer compared with neoplasia-free smokers. The performance characteristic was excellent with an area under the receiver operator characteristic curve of >0.80 and was equivalent for both disease stage (early versus late) and histologies (small cell versus non-small cell lung cancers). An independent data set validated the findings with only a minimal degradation of performance characteristics. Our results offer proof of concept that buccal PWS may potentially herald a minimally intrusive prescreening test that could be integral to the success of lung cancer population screening programs.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis