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Clinical Proteomics 2011
Evaluating the potential of a novel oral lesion exudate collection method coupled with mass spectrometry-based proteomics for oral cancer biomarker discoveryKeywords: Oral Pre-Malignant Lesion (OPML), Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma (OSCC), exudate, mass spectrometry-based proteomics, biomarker Abstract: In this pilot study we evaluated the potential of a novel method using commercial PerioPaper absorbent strips for non-invasive collection of oral lesion exudate material coupled with mass spectrometry-based proteomics for oral cancer biomarker discovery.Our evaluation focused on three core issues. First, using an "on-strip" processing method, we found that protein can be isolated from exudate samples in amounts compatible with large-scale mass spectrometry-based proteomic analysis. Second, we found that the OPML exudate proteome was distinct from that of whole saliva, while being similar to the OPML epithelial cell proteome, demonstrating the fidelity of our exudate collection method. Third, in a proof-of-principle study, we identified numerous, inflammation-associated proteins showing an expected increase in abundance in OPML exudates compared to healthy oral tissue exudates. These results demonstrate the feasibility of identifying differentially abundant proteins from exudate samples, which is essential for biomarker discovery studies.Collectively, our findings demonstrate that our exudate collection method coupled with mass spectrometry-based proteomics has great potential for transforming OSCC biomarker discovery and clinical diagnostics assay development.Oral cancer occurs most commonly (~90%) in the form of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) and develops in stages starting with healthy oral epithelium progressing to an Oral Pre-Malignant Lesion (OPML) and on to OSCC. The survival rate of OSCC has remained static over the last 30 years at about 50%. However, where malignancy is detected soon after the transition from OPML, treatments are more effective and survival is as high as 80% [1]. Despite the clinical need to distinguish between OSCC and OPML, lesion types are not readily classified by simple visible inspection and more invasive tests are used instead. Currently the gold standard for classifying lesions is to use an incisional biopsy coupled with histol
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