News Release

Oral cancer diagnosis using saliva

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Researchers report an accurate, high-throughput, low-cost, and noninvasive method for diagnosing oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) that uses a combination of conductive polymer spray ionization mass spectrometry and machine learning to detect changes in a wide range of OSCC-associated metabolites in saliva; the method was able to analyze saliva samples from 373 volunteers in 4.5 hours with a diagnostic accuracy of 86.7%, suggesting that the method might be used as a point-of-care-test for OSCC, according to the authors.

Article #20-01395: "Oral squamous cell carcinoma diagnosed from saliva metabolic profiling," by Xiaowei Song et al.

MEDIA CONTACT: Richard N. Zare, Stanford University, CA; tel: 650-328-0890, 650-799-8313; e-mail: zare@stanford.edu; Qingang Hu, Nanjing University, CHINA; e-mail: qghu@nju.edu.cn

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