Diagnosis of pregnancy disorder in the first‐trimester patient plasma with Raman spectroscopy and protein analysis

Author:

Mathew Ansuja P.12,Cutshaw Gabriel12,Appel Olivia12,Funk Meghan3,Synan Lilly12,Waite Joshua4,Ghazvini Saman12,Wen Xiaona2,Sarkar Soumik4,Santillan Mark3,Santillan Donna3,Bardhan Rizia12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering Iowa State University Ames Iowa USA

2. Nanovaccine Institute Iowa State University Ames Iowa USA

3. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Carver College of Medicine University of Iowa Hospitals & Clinics Iowa City Iowa USA

4. Department of Mechanical Engineering Iowa State University Ames Iowa USA

Abstract

AbstractGestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is a pregnancy disorder associated with short‐ and long‐term adverse outcomes in both mothers and infants. The current clinical test of blood glucose levels late in the second trimester is inadequate for early detection of GDM. Here we show the utility of Raman spectroscopy (RS) for rapid and highly sensitive maternal metabolome screening for GDM in the first trimester. Key metabolites, including phospholipids, carbohydrates, and major amino acids, were identified with RS and validated with mass spectrometry, enabling insights into associated metabolic pathway enrichment. Using classical machine learning (ML) approaches, we showed the performance of the RS metabolic model (cross‐validation AUC 0.97) surpassed that achieved with patients' clinical data alone (cross‐validation AUC 0.59) or prior studies with single biomarkers. Further, we analyzed novel proteins and identified fetuin‐A as a promising candidate for early GDM prediction. A correlation analysis showed a moderate to strong correlation between multiple metabolites and proteins, suggesting a combined protein‐metabolic analysis integrated with ML would enable a powerful screening platform for first trimester diagnosis. Our study underscores RS metabolic profiling as a cost‐effective tool that can be integrated into the current clinical workflow for accurate risk stratification of GDM and to improve both maternal and neonatal outcomes.

Funder

American Heart Association

Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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