Identification of late-life depression and mild cognitive impairment via serum surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy and multivariate statistical analysis

  • Yan D
  • Xiong C
  • Zhong Q
  • et al.
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Abstract

Identification of age-related neuropsychiatric disorders, i.e., late-life depression (LDD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is of imperative clinical value considering the large probability of misdiagnosis and current lack of sensitive, non-invasive and low-cost diagnostic approaches. Here, the serum surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) technique is proposed to identify healthy controls, LDD and MCI patients. Based on SERS peaks analysis, abnormal levels of ascorbic acid, saccharide, cell-free DNA and amino acids in serum are found to be potential biomarkers for identifying LDD and MCI. These biomarkers might be related to oxidative stress, nutritional status, lipid peroxidation and metabolic abnormalities. Moreover, partial least square analysis-linear discriminant analysis (PLS-LDA) is applied to those collected SERS spectra. Finally, the overall identification accuracy is 83.2%, and accuracies are 91.6% and 85.7% for differentiating healthy versus neuropsychiatric disorders and LDD versus MCI, respectively. Thus, the serum SERS combined with multivariate statistical analysis has proved its successful potential for rapid, sensitive and non-invasive identification of healthy, LDD and MCI, which may open new avenues for early diagnosis and timely intervention for age-related neuropsychiatric disorders.

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Yan, D., Xiong, C., Zhong, Q., Yao, Y., Chen, S., Mei, X., & Zhu, S. (2023). Identification of late-life depression and mild cognitive impairment via serum surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy and multivariate statistical analysis. Biomedical Optics Express, 14(6), 2920. https://doi.org/10.1364/boe.487939

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