Potential of ATR-FTIR-Chemometrics in Covid-19: Disease Recognition.
Octavio Calvo-GomezHiram CalvoLeticia Cedillo-BarrónHéctor Vivanco-CidJuan Manuel Alvarado-OrozcoDavid Andrés Fernandez-BenavidesLourdes Arriaga-PizanoEduardo Ferat-OsorioJuan Carlos Anda-GarayConstantino López-MaciasMercedes G LópezPublished in: ACS omega (2022)
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused major disturbances to human health and economy on a global scale. Although vaccination campaigns and important advances in treatments have been developed, an early diagnosis is still crucial. While PCR is the golden standard for diagnosing SARS-CoV-2 infection, rapid and low-cost techniques such as ATR-FTIR followed by multivariate analyses, where dimensions are reduced for obtaining valuable information from highly complex data sets, have been investigated. Most dimensionality reduction techniques attempt to discriminate and create new combinations of attributes prior to the classification stage; thus, the user needs to optimize a wealth of parameters before reaching reliable and valid outcomes. In this work, we developed a method for evaluating SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 disease severity on infrared spectra of sera, based on a rather simple feature selection technique (correlation-based feature subset selection). Dengue infection was also evaluated for assessing whether selectivity toward a different virus was possible with the same algorithm, although independent models were built for both viruses. High sensitivity (94.55%) and high specificity (98.44%) were obtained for assessing SARS-CoV-2 infection with our model; for severe COVID-19 disease classification, sensitivity is 70.97% and specificity is 94.95%; for mild disease classification, sensitivity is 33.33% and specificity is 94.64%; and for dengue infection assessment, sensitivity is 84.27% and specificity is 94.64%.
Keyphrases
- machine learning
- deep learning
- coronavirus disease
- sars cov
- human health
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- low cost
- risk assessment
- zika virus
- structural basis
- artificial intelligence
- dengue virus
- big data
- aedes aegypti
- climate change
- early onset
- electronic health record
- data analysis
- adipose tissue
- weight loss
- mass spectrometry
- gas chromatography mass spectrometry