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Noninvasive detection of lung cancer by analysis of exhaled breath

BACKGROUND: Lung cancer is one of the leading causes of death in Europe and the western world. At present, diagnosis of lung cancer very often happens late in the course of the disease since inexpensive, non-invasive and sufficiently sensitive and specific screening methods are not available. Even t...

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Autores principales: Bajtarevic, Amel, Ager, Clemens, Pienz, Martin, Klieber, Martin, Schwarz, Konrad, Ligor, Magdalena, Ligor, Tomasz, Filipiak, Wojciech, Denz, Hubert, Fiegl, Michael, Hilbe, Wolfgang, Weiss, Wolfgang, Lukas, Peter, Jamnig, Herbert, Hackl, Martin, Haidenberger, Alfred, Buszewski, Bogusław, Miekisch, Wolfram, Schubert, Jochen, Amann, Anton
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2761408/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19788722
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-9-348
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author Bajtarevic, Amel
Ager, Clemens
Pienz, Martin
Klieber, Martin
Schwarz, Konrad
Ligor, Magdalena
Ligor, Tomasz
Filipiak, Wojciech
Denz, Hubert
Fiegl, Michael
Hilbe, Wolfgang
Weiss, Wolfgang
Lukas, Peter
Jamnig, Herbert
Hackl, Martin
Haidenberger, Alfred
Buszewski, Bogusław
Miekisch, Wolfram
Schubert, Jochen
Amann, Anton
author_facet Bajtarevic, Amel
Ager, Clemens
Pienz, Martin
Klieber, Martin
Schwarz, Konrad
Ligor, Magdalena
Ligor, Tomasz
Filipiak, Wojciech
Denz, Hubert
Fiegl, Michael
Hilbe, Wolfgang
Weiss, Wolfgang
Lukas, Peter
Jamnig, Herbert
Hackl, Martin
Haidenberger, Alfred
Buszewski, Bogusław
Miekisch, Wolfram
Schubert, Jochen
Amann, Anton
author_sort Bajtarevic, Amel
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Lung cancer is one of the leading causes of death in Europe and the western world. At present, diagnosis of lung cancer very often happens late in the course of the disease since inexpensive, non-invasive and sufficiently sensitive and specific screening methods are not available. Even though the CT diagnostic methods are good, it must be assured that "screening benefit outweighs risk, across all individuals screened, not only those with lung cancer". An early non-invasive diagnosis of lung cancer would improve prognosis and enlarge treatment options. Analysis of exhaled breath would be an ideal diagnostic method, since it is non-invasive and totally painless. METHODS: Exhaled breath and inhaled room air samples were analyzed using proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS) and solid phase microextraction with subsequent gas chromatography mass spectrometry (SPME-GCMS). For the PTR-MS measurements, 220 lung cancer patients and 441 healthy volunteers were recruited. For the GCMS measurements, we collected samples from 65 lung cancer patients and 31 healthy volunteers. Lung cancer patients were in different disease stages and under treatment with different regimes. Mixed expiratory and indoor air samples were collected in Tedlar bags, and either analyzed directly by PTR-MS or transferred to glass vials and analyzed by gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GCMS). Only those measurements of compounds were considered, which showed at least a 15% higher concentration in exhaled breath than in indoor air. Compounds related to smoking behavior such as acetonitrile and benzene were not used to differentiate between lung cancer patients and healthy volunteers. RESULTS: Isoprene, acetone and methanol are compounds appearing in everybody's exhaled breath. These three main compounds of exhaled breath show slightly lower concentrations in lung cancer patients as compared to healthy volunteers (p < 0.01 for isoprene and acetone, p = 0.011 for methanol; PTR-MS measurements). A comparison of the GCMS-results of 65 lung cancer patients with those of 31 healthy volunteers revealed differences in concentration for more than 50 compounds. Sensitivity for detection of lung cancer patients based on presence of (one of) 4 different compounds not arising in exhaled breath of healthy volunteers was 52% with a specificity of 100%. Using 15 (or 21) different compounds for distinction, sensitivity was 71% (80%) with a specificity of 100%. Potential marker compounds are alcohols, aldehydes, ketones and hydrocarbons. CONCLUSION: GCMS-SPME is a relatively insensitive method. Hence compounds not appearing in exhaled breath of healthy volunteers may be below the limit of detection (LOD). PTR-MS, on the other hand, does not need preconcentration and gives much more reliable quantitative results then GCMS-SPME. The shortcoming of PTR-MS is that it cannot identify compounds with certainty. Hence SPME-GCMS and PTR-MS complement each other, each method having its particular advantages and disadvantages. Exhaled breath analysis is promising to become a future non-invasive lung cancer screening method. In order to proceed towards this goal, precise identification of compounds observed in exhaled breath of lung cancer patients is necessary. Comparison with compounds released from lung cancer cell cultures, and additional information on exhaled breath composition in other cancer forms will be important.
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spelling pubmed-27614082009-10-14 Noninvasive detection of lung cancer by analysis of exhaled breath Bajtarevic, Amel Ager, Clemens Pienz, Martin Klieber, Martin Schwarz, Konrad Ligor, Magdalena Ligor, Tomasz Filipiak, Wojciech Denz, Hubert Fiegl, Michael Hilbe, Wolfgang Weiss, Wolfgang Lukas, Peter Jamnig, Herbert Hackl, Martin Haidenberger, Alfred Buszewski, Bogusław Miekisch, Wolfram Schubert, Jochen Amann, Anton BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: Lung cancer is one of the leading causes of death in Europe and the western world. At present, diagnosis of lung cancer very often happens late in the course of the disease since inexpensive, non-invasive and sufficiently sensitive and specific screening methods are not available. Even though the CT diagnostic methods are good, it must be assured that "screening benefit outweighs risk, across all individuals screened, not only those with lung cancer". An early non-invasive diagnosis of lung cancer would improve prognosis and enlarge treatment options. Analysis of exhaled breath would be an ideal diagnostic method, since it is non-invasive and totally painless. METHODS: Exhaled breath and inhaled room air samples were analyzed using proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS) and solid phase microextraction with subsequent gas chromatography mass spectrometry (SPME-GCMS). For the PTR-MS measurements, 220 lung cancer patients and 441 healthy volunteers were recruited. For the GCMS measurements, we collected samples from 65 lung cancer patients and 31 healthy volunteers. Lung cancer patients were in different disease stages and under treatment with different regimes. Mixed expiratory and indoor air samples were collected in Tedlar bags, and either analyzed directly by PTR-MS or transferred to glass vials and analyzed by gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GCMS). Only those measurements of compounds were considered, which showed at least a 15% higher concentration in exhaled breath than in indoor air. Compounds related to smoking behavior such as acetonitrile and benzene were not used to differentiate between lung cancer patients and healthy volunteers. RESULTS: Isoprene, acetone and methanol are compounds appearing in everybody's exhaled breath. These three main compounds of exhaled breath show slightly lower concentrations in lung cancer patients as compared to healthy volunteers (p < 0.01 for isoprene and acetone, p = 0.011 for methanol; PTR-MS measurements). A comparison of the GCMS-results of 65 lung cancer patients with those of 31 healthy volunteers revealed differences in concentration for more than 50 compounds. Sensitivity for detection of lung cancer patients based on presence of (one of) 4 different compounds not arising in exhaled breath of healthy volunteers was 52% with a specificity of 100%. Using 15 (or 21) different compounds for distinction, sensitivity was 71% (80%) with a specificity of 100%. Potential marker compounds are alcohols, aldehydes, ketones and hydrocarbons. CONCLUSION: GCMS-SPME is a relatively insensitive method. Hence compounds not appearing in exhaled breath of healthy volunteers may be below the limit of detection (LOD). PTR-MS, on the other hand, does not need preconcentration and gives much more reliable quantitative results then GCMS-SPME. The shortcoming of PTR-MS is that it cannot identify compounds with certainty. Hence SPME-GCMS and PTR-MS complement each other, each method having its particular advantages and disadvantages. Exhaled breath analysis is promising to become a future non-invasive lung cancer screening method. In order to proceed towards this goal, precise identification of compounds observed in exhaled breath of lung cancer patients is necessary. Comparison with compounds released from lung cancer cell cultures, and additional information on exhaled breath composition in other cancer forms will be important. BioMed Central 2009-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2761408/ /pubmed/19788722 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-9-348 Text en Copyright ©2009 Bajtarevic et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bajtarevic, Amel
Ager, Clemens
Pienz, Martin
Klieber, Martin
Schwarz, Konrad
Ligor, Magdalena
Ligor, Tomasz
Filipiak, Wojciech
Denz, Hubert
Fiegl, Michael
Hilbe, Wolfgang
Weiss, Wolfgang
Lukas, Peter
Jamnig, Herbert
Hackl, Martin
Haidenberger, Alfred
Buszewski, Bogusław
Miekisch, Wolfram
Schubert, Jochen
Amann, Anton
Noninvasive detection of lung cancer by analysis of exhaled breath
title Noninvasive detection of lung cancer by analysis of exhaled breath
title_full Noninvasive detection of lung cancer by analysis of exhaled breath
title_fullStr Noninvasive detection of lung cancer by analysis of exhaled breath
title_full_unstemmed Noninvasive detection of lung cancer by analysis of exhaled breath
title_short Noninvasive detection of lung cancer by analysis of exhaled breath
title_sort noninvasive detection of lung cancer by analysis of exhaled breath
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2761408/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19788722
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-9-348
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