Metabolically Active Zones Involving Fatty Acid Elongation Delineated by DESI-MSI Correlate with Pathological and Prognostic Features of Colorectal Cancer.
Martin KaufmannNatasha IaboniAmoon JamzadDavid HurlbutKevin Yi Mi RenJohn F RudanParvin MousaviGabor FichtingerSonal VarmaAntonio Caycedo-MarulandaChristopher J B NicolPublished in: Metabolites (2023)
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second leading cause of cancer deaths. Despite recent advances, five-year survival rates remain largely unchanged. Desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry imaging (DESI) is an emerging nondestructive metabolomics-based method that retains the spatial orientation of small-molecule profiles on tissue sections, which may be validated by 'gold standard' histopathology. In this study, CRC samples were analyzed by DESI from 10 patients undergoing surgery at Kingston Health Sciences Center. The spatial correlation of the mass spectral profiles was compared with histopathological annotations and prognostic biomarkers. Fresh frozen sections of representative colorectal cross sections and simulated endoscopic biopsy samples containing tumour and non-neoplastic mucosa for each patient were generated and analyzed by DESI in a blinded fashion. Sections were then hematoxylin and eosin (H and E) stained, annotated by two independent pathologists, and analyzed. Using PCA/LDA-based models, DESI profiles of the cross sections and biopsies achieved 97% and 75% accuracies in identifying the presence of adenocarcinoma, using leave-one-patient-out cross validation. Among the m/z ratios exhibiting the greatest differential abundance in adenocarcinoma were a series of eight long-chain or very-long-chain fatty acids, consistent with molecular and targeted metabolomics indicators of de novo lipogenesis in CRC tissue. Sample stratification based on the presence of lympovascular invasion (LVI), a poor CRC prognostic indicator, revealed the abundance of oxidized phospholipids, suggestive of pro-apoptotic mechanisms, was increased in LVI-negative compared to LVI-positive patients. This study provides evidence of the potential clinical utility of spatially-resolved DESI profiles to enhance the information available to clinicians for CRC diagnosis and prognosis.
Keyphrases
- fatty acid
- mass spectrometry
- small molecule
- patients undergoing
- squamous cell carcinoma
- end stage renal disease
- healthcare
- public health
- case report
- ultrasound guided
- high resolution
- chronic kidney disease
- single cell
- liquid chromatography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- metabolic syndrome
- prognostic factors
- computed tomography
- cross sectional
- insulin resistance
- health information
- randomized controlled trial
- social media
- coronary artery bypass
- gas chromatography
- clinical trial
- antibiotic resistance genes
- fine needle aspiration
- cancer therapy
- ms ms
- photodynamic therapy
- simultaneous determination
- high performance liquid chromatography
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- papillary thyroid
- optical coherence tomography
- drug delivery
- coronary artery disease
- fluorescence imaging