Shared Plasma Fatty Acid Profiles in Four Cancer Types Enable Diagnosis and Discrimination of Gastrointestinal and Lung Cancers
Ahad Hussain, Kangwe Shen, Yan Yan, Xuejun Kang, Li Xie

TL;DR
This study shows that blood fatty acid patterns can help diagnose and distinguish between different types of cancer, including gastrointestinal and lung cancers.
Contribution
The study identifies shared and cancer-specific fatty acid profiles that enable accurate diagnosis and classification of four major cancer types.
Findings
Shared fatty acid alterations were observed across four cancer types, indicating a common metabolic shift.
Gastrointestinal cancers showed a distinct fatty acid pattern, while lung cancer showed opposite trends.
PLS-DA models achieved high diagnostic accuracy, with AUC values up to 0.926 for gastric cancer.
Abstract
Background: Cancer is a leading cause of mortality worldwide, characterized by metabolic reprogramming, including alterations in fatty acid (FA) metabolism. Plasma FA profiles hold promise as non-invasive biomarkers for the diagnosis and classification of cancer. Objectives: This study aimed to investigate the diagnostic potential of plasma FA profiles across four major cancers and to identify shared and cancer-type-specific metabolic alterations. Methods: We examine comprehensive FA profiling of plasma samples from 368 individuals, including patients with colorectal (CRC, n = 94), gastric (GC, n = 55), esophageal (EC, n = 53), and lung cancer (LC, n = 73), alongside 93 healthy controls (HCs) by gas chromatography–mass spectrometry. Data were analyzed using univariate statistics and multivariate modeling analysis. Results: Univariate analysis showed a shared set of altered FAs across…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer, Lipids, and Metabolism · Metabolomics and Mass Spectrometry Studies · Fatty Acid Research and Health
