4.3 Article

Developing Urinary Metabolomic Signatures as Early Bladder Cancer Diagnostic Markers

Journal

OMICS-A JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages 1-11

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/omi.2014.0116

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Science and Technology, Zhejiang Province [2012C33SA600020]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81400589]
  3. Chinese High Tech Research and Development Programs [2012AA022705]

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Early detection is vital to improve the overall survival rate of bladder cancer (BCa) patients, yet there is a lack of a reliable urine-based assay for early detection of BCa. Urine metabolites represented a potential rich source of biomarkers for BCa. This study aimed to develop a metabolomics approach for high coverage discovery and identification of metabolites in urine samples. Urine samples from 23 early stage BCa patients and 21 healthy volunteers with minimum sample preparations were analyzed by a short 30 min UPLC-HRMS method. We detected and quantified over 9000 unique UPLC-HRMS features, which is more than four times than about 2000 features detected in previous urine metabolomic studies. Furthermore, multivariate OPLS-DA classification models were established to differentiate urine samples from bladder cancer cohort and normal health cohort. We identified three BCa-upregulated metabolites: nicotinuric acid, trehalose, AspAspGlyTrp, and three BCa-downregulated metabolites: inosinic acid, ureidosuccinic acid, GlyCysAlaLys. Finally, analysis of six post-surgery BCa urine samples showed that these BCa-metabolomic features reverted to normal state after tumor removal, suggesting that they reflected metabolomic features associated with BCa. ROC analyses using two linear regression models to combine the identified markers showed a high diagnostic performance for detecting BCa with AUC (area under the ROC curve) values of 0.919 to 0.934. In summary, we developed a high coverage metabolomic approach that has potential for biomarker discovery in cancers.

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