1. Diagnosis of melanoma by imaging mass spectrometry: Development and validation of a melanoma prediction model
- Author
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Richard M. Caprioli, Nathan Heath Patterson, Sara M. Kantrow, Nico Verbeeck, Sarah P. Nicholson, Rami N. Al-Rohil, Jameelah Z Muhammad, Marc Claesen, Margaret L. Compton, Ahmed K. Alomari, Jason B. Robbins, Jeremy L. Norris, and Jessica L. Moore
- Subjects
Multivariate statistics ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Skin Neoplasms ,Histology ,Nevi and melanomas ,business.industry ,Melanoma ,Dermatology ,medicine.disease ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Article ,Mass spectrometry imaging ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Support vector machine ,Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization ,Test set ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology ,Medical diagnosis ,Indeterminate ,business - Abstract
Background The definitive diagnosis of melanocytic neoplasia using solely histopathologic evaluation can be challenging. Novel techniques that objectively confirm diagnoses are needed. This study details the development and validation of a melanoma prediction model from spatially resolved multivariate protein expression profiles generated by Imaging Mass Spectrometry (IMS). Methods Three board-certified dermatopathologists blindly evaluated 333 samples. Samples with triply concordant diagnoses were included in this study, divided into a training set (n = 241) and a test set (n = 92). Both the training and test sets included various representative subclasses of unambiguous nevi and melanomas. A prediction model was developed from the training set using a linear support vector machine (SVM) classification model. Results We validated the prediction model on the independent test set of 92 specimens (75 classified correctly, two misclassified, and 15 indeterminate). IMS detects melanoma with a sensitivity of 97.6% and a specificity of 96.4% when evaluating each unique spot. IMS predicts melanoma at the sample level with a sensitivity of 97.3% and a specificity of 97.5%. Indeterminate results were excluded from sensitivity and specificity calculations. Conclusion This study provides evidence that IMS-based proteomics results are highly concordant to diagnostic results obtained by careful histopathologic evaluation from a panel of expert dermatopathologists. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2021