This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of using general Raman spectroscopy as a method to screen for breast cancer. The objective was to develop a machine learning model that utilizes Raman spectroscopy to detect serum samples from breast cancer patients, benign cases, and healthy subjects, with puncture biopsy as the gold standard for comparison. The goal was to explore the value of Raman spectroscopy in the differential diagnosis of breast cancer, benign lesions, and healthy individuals.
In this study, blood serum samples were collected from a total of 333 participants. Among them, there were 129 cases of tumors (pathologically diagnosed as breast cancer and labeled as cancer), 91 cases of benign lesions (pathologically diagnosed as benign and labeled as benign), and 113 cases of healthy controls (labeled as normal). Raman spectra of the serum samples from each group were collected. To classify the normal, benign, and cancer sample groups, principal component analysis (PCA) combined with support vector machine (SVM) was used. The SVM model was evaluated using a cross-validation method.
The results of the study revealed significant differences in the mean Raman spectra of the serum samples between the normal and tumor/benign groups. Although the mean Raman spectra showed slight variations between the cancer and benign groups, the SVM model achieved a remarkable prediction accuracy of up to 98% for classifying cancer, benign, and normal groups.
In conclusion, this exploratory study has demonstrated the tremendous potential of general Raman spectroscopy as a clinical adjunctive diagnostic and rapid screening tool for breast cancer.