Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide, emphasizing the urgent need for reliable and efficient diagnostic methods. Conventional approaches often involve invasive procedures and can be time-consuming and costly, thereby delaying the effective treatment. The current study explores the potential of Raman spectroscopy, as a promising noninvasive technique, by analyzing human blood plasma samples from lung cancer patients and healthy controls. In a benchmark study, 16 machine learning models were evaluated by employing four strategies: the combination of dimensionality reduction with classifiers; application of feature selection prior to classification; stand-alone classifiers; and a unified predictive model. The models showed different performances due to the inherent complexity of the data, achieving accuracies from 0.77 to 0.85 and areas under the curve for receiver operating characteristics from 0.85 to 0.94. Hybrid methods incorporating dimensionality reduction and feature selection algorithms present the highest figures of merit. Nevertheless, all machine learning models deliver creditable scores and demonstrate that Raman spectroscopy represents a powerful method for future in vitro diagnostics of lung cancer.
CITATION STYLE
Hano, H., Lawrie, C. H., Suarez, B., Paredes Lario, A., Elejoste Echeverría, I., Gómez Mediavilla, J., … Seifert, A. (2024). Power of Light: Raman Spectroscopy and Machine Learning for the Detection of Lung Cancer. ACS Omega, 9(12), 14084–14091. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.3c09537
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