| Literature DB >> 20175931 |
Byong Chul Yoo1, Sun-Young Kong, Sang-Geun Jang, Kyung-Hee Kim, Sun-A Ahn, Weon-Seo Park, Sohee Park, Tak Yun, Hyeon-Seok Eom.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) is a hematologic malignancy for which good diagnostic markers are lacking. Despite continued improvement in our understanding of NHL, efforts to identify diagnostic markers have yielded dismal results. Here, we translated low-mass-ion information in urine samples from patients with NHL into a diagnostic marker.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20175931 PMCID: PMC2841663 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-10-55
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
The characteristics of 96 NHL patients
| No. of Patients (%) | |
|---|---|
| Age, years (median, range) | 57, 23-87 |
| Sex | |
| Male | 61 (63.5) |
| Female | 35 (36.5) |
| Histologic type (WHO) | |
| Diffuse large B cell lymphoma | 70 (72.9) |
| Mantle cell lymphoma | 6 (6.2) |
| T cell lineage | 16 (16.7) |
| Follicular lymphoma | 2 (2.1) |
| Burkitt's lymphoma | 2 (2.1) |
| Performance status | |
| 0 | 32 (33.3) |
| 1 | 60 (62.5) |
| 2 | 4 (4.2) |
| Stage | |
| I | 16 (16.7) |
| II | 40 (41.6) |
| III | 18 (18.8) |
| IV | 22 (22.9) |
| Extra-nodal involvement | |
| Absent | 43 (44.8) |
| Present | 57 (55.2) |
| IPI | |
| Low | 52 (54.1) |
| Low-intermediate | 18 (18.8) |
| High-intermediate | 20 (20.8) |
| High | 6 (6.3) |
| Bone marrow involvement | |
| Absent | 90 (93.8) |
| Present | 5 (5.2) |
| Not identified | 1 (1.0) |
| Therapeutic regimen | |
| R-CHOP | 79 (82.3) |
| CHOP | 8 (8.3) |
| Others | 9 (9.4) |
In histologic type, T cell lineage includes anaplastic large cell lymphoma, angioimmunoblastic T cell lymphoma, peripheral T cell lymphoma, and NK/T cell lymphoma. Except of follicular lymphoma as an indolent type of NHL, all other histologic subclasses represent aggressive type.
Performance status was determined according to the criteria, ECOG score.
IPI: international prognostic index
CHOP regimen includes cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisolone. R-CHOP is a combination regimen of CHOP with the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody, rituximab.
Figure 1Selection of two low-mass ions with differential peak areas in urines from controls and NHL patients after establishing MALDI-MS conditions for low-mass-ion profiling. A. The resolution of mass peaks acquired at variable focus mass. Linear resolution of low-mass peaks was obtained at a focus mass of 500 m/z. B. The effect of laser intensity on overall mass spectrum acquisition. Laser intensity was positively correlated with the area of low-mass peaks (< 1000 m/z). Because low-mass peaks with the highest intensity become saturated at a laser intensity of 5500, the laser intensity for data acquisition was fixed at 5250. C. Typical pattern of mass spectra from urines from controls and NHL patients. D. Box plot of total area of low-mass peaks (< 1000 m/z). The total area of low-mass peaks was obtained from four replicate experiments (cases A to D) using urines from 12 controls (green) and 11 NHL patients (pink).
Figure 2Discriminating NHL patients from controls based on low-mass ions present in urine. A. Principal components analysis (PCA). The first principle component (PC1) explains the greatest amount of variance, and PC2 represents the next largest amount. Left panel: Unsupervised PCA showing that profiling of low-mass ions in urine may discriminate NHL patients. Right panel: Supervised PCA describing low-mass ions with differential mass-peak intensities in urines from controls and NHL patients. B. Thirty low-mass ions selected by t-test analysis. C. Profile plot focused on 137.08 m/z peaks. The profile plot demonstrates a higher peak intensity of the 137.08-m/z ion in urines from NHL patients compared to that in controls in both training and validation groups. Lower panel describes overlapped mass spectra of four urine samples from NHL patients and controls from blue box in profile plot.
Metabolites with 137.07 ± 0.05 m/z in a positive-mode mass detection
| HMDB ID | Common Name | Chemical Formula | Adduct MW (Da) [Matching HMDB MW] | MW Difference (Da) [QueryMass - AdductMass] | Adduct |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HMDB03152 | N-Methylnicotinamide | C7H8N2O | 137.070938 [136.063660] | 0.004333 | M+H [1+] |
| HMDB00209 | Benzeneacetic acid | C8H8O2 | 137.059708 [136.052429] | 0.006897 | M+H [1+] |
| HMDB01326 | Phenyl acetate | C8H8O2 | 137.059708 [136.052429] | 0.006897 | M+H [1+] |
| HMDB11659 | 2-Methylerythritol | C5H12O4 | 137.080841 [136.073563] | 0.014236 | M+H [1+] |
| HMDB01216 | Tetrahydropteridine | C6H8N4 | 137.082184 [136.074905] | 0.015579 | M+H [1+] |
| HMDB00157 | Hypoxanthine | C5H4N4O | 137.045792 [136.038513] | 0.020813 | M+H [1+] |
| HMDB00613 | Erythronic acid | C4H8O5 | 137.044449 [136.037170] | 0.022156 | M+H [1+] |
| HMDB00943 | Threonic acid | C4H8O5 | 137.044449 [136.037170] | 0.022156 | M+H [1+] |
M+H[1+] adducts only are listed.
Figure 3Identical ESI-MS/MS pattern obtained from 137.08 m/z ion in urine and hypoxanthine. A. Mass shift of the 137.08-m/z ion in urine in LTQ-XL analysis. In a direct urine analysis without LC separation, the urine candidate 137.08-m/z ion and hypoxanthine (HX) were monitored as 137.70 m/z. B. The ESI-MS/MS pattern of the 137.08-m/z ion in urine was identical to that of HX. C. Mass-peak area of the 137.08-m/z ion and HX concentration were positively correlated; however, this relationship did not reach statistical significance.
Figure 4Significant decrease of hypoxanthine and xanthine in NHL urine. The levels of hypoxanthine (HX) (A) and its oxidative product, xanthine (X) (B) were significantly lower in NHL urines (both P < 0.001). Area under the curve, sensitivity and specificity obtained from blind validation of 221 urines samples (125 control, and 96 NHL) are shown.