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Volatiles in Breath and Headspace Analysis - Diagnostic Markers

Volatile Organic Compounds in Breath and Headspace Analysis - Diagnostic and Monitoring Markers for Diseases

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03228095
Acronym
Volatolome
Enrollment
3000
Registered
2017-07-24
Start date
2017-07-24
Completion date
2025-12-31
Last updated
2018-08-21

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Tuberculosis, Gastric Cancer, Peptic Ulcer, Atrophic Gastritis, Intestinal Metaplasia, Gastric Dysplasia, Colorectal Cancer, Colorectal Polyp, Colorectal Adenoma, Pancreatic Cancer, Pancreatitis, Chronic, Liver Cancer, Liver Cirrhosis, Flu, Human, Other Infectious Diseases, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

Keywords

Volatile Organic Compounds, Tuberculosis, Nano-sensors, Electronic nose, Digestive cancers

Brief summary

Detection of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) directly from tissue by headspace analysis (skin, surgery material, other tissue) and exhaled breath is feasible using affordable user-friendly novel nano-chemo sensors that can accurately be used for screening and monitoring purpose

Detailed description

Study propose to explore a novel approach for the diagnosis and monitoring of diseases. The approach is based on the detection of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that are emitted from the cells and detected directly from tissue, such as skin, surgery material, blood as well as from exhaled breath. In the literature there are several reports on VOCs which can be detected by Gas Chromatography - Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS) means directly from: (i) the headspace of TB cells (i.e., the mixture of volatile biomarkers trapped above the TB cells in a sealed vessel); (ii) the exhaled breath or (iii) from urine. Excellent results in detection of the tuberculosis disease by using nanosensor array were shown by Nakhleh et al achieved 90% sensitivity, 93% specificity and 92% accuracy in discrimination between healthy and diseased patients using electronic nose devices with a single sensor. None of the reported studies identified the tentative recognition of the tuberculosis-related VOCs and quantified the concentration differences between samples from ill and healthy controls. Further investigation of the exhaled breath tuberculosis-related VOC by GC-MS means will improve the knowledge and simultaneously will help to improve the nanosensor array design. Several studies have shown that disease-rated VOC patterns can be transmitted through the skin, and, therefore, skin can be used as a source for disease detection and identification. The principle of this detection approach is that disease-related changes are reflected in measurable changes in the skin through exchange via the blood. In addition, several studies have suggested that the VOC levels are elevated even in early stages of the disease, because they reflect a change in the human's body chemistry (as a result of the development of disease condition), rather than the amount of infected cells. Complementary studies have shown that VOCs can be emitted to the skin within minutes after they have emerged in the infected part of the human's body. What is particularly significant about this approach is that each type of (infectious) disease has its own unique pattern of VOCs, and, therefore, the presence of one (infectious) disease would not screen other disease types. Nevertheless, to the best of our knowledge, the detection of tuberculosis VOCs through skin has not been examined yet. Additionally, all studies targeting skin VOCs have been carried out by means of spectrometry and spectroscopy techniques. In few cases, electronic nose devices were used. These techniques are powerful tools for detecting VOCs. However, to date, the use of these techniques has been impeded by the need for moderately to highly expensive equipment's, the high levels of expertise required to operate such instruments, the speed required for sampling and analysis, and the need for preconcentration techniques. For VOC skin testing and breath testing of tuberculosis to become widely used in clinical practice, several advances in the knowledge of tuberculosis specific VOCs and sensor development need to occur. Nanoparticles containing flexible sensors, based on organic films, are more likely to become a clinical diagnostic tool, because they are significantly smaller, easier-to-use, and significantly less expensive. In recent years comprehensive studies have shown excellent data for using VOCs from exhaled breath as tool for diagnosing gastric cancer. In one of the biggest studies carried out by Chinese and Latvian centers, malignancy could be identified with 89% sensitivity and 90% specificity after cross-validation, irrespective of important confounding factors in gastric patients such as tobacco or alcohol consumption and H. pylori infection. A breath test for GC staging could also be demonstrated by distinguishing stage I&II cancers from stage III&IV cancers with 89% sensitivity and 94% specificity. These studies used both - mass spectometry and nano-sensors technologies. Most recent study published in ASC Nano journal in January 2017 reported on more extended use of nanoarry sensors in breath analysis, blind experiments showed that 86% accuracy could be achieved with the artificially intelligent nanoarray, allowing both detection and discrimination between the different disease conditions examined (chronic kidney failure, idiopathic Parkinson's disease, atypical Parkinsonism , multiple sclerosis, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, irritable bowel syndrome, pulmonary arterial hypertension, pre-eclampsia in pregnant women, head and neck cancer, lung cancer, colorectal cancer, bladder cancer, kidney cancer, prostate cancer, gastric cancer, and ovarian cancer. Analysis of the artificially intelligent nanoarray also showed that each disease has its own unique breathprint, and that the presence of one disease would not screen out others. Therefore, this study is aimed to test VOCs detecting technologies as diagnostic and monitoring tools for digestive tract and infectious diseases.

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTVOC detection in breath and in skin headspace

VOC will be detected in breath with off-line and on-line testing and in skin headspace with off-line testing

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTBreath sampling

Breath sampling for VOCs detections will be carried out using nano-sensor based devices (electronic nose)

Upper endoscopy with proper biopsy work-up will be used for identification and stratification of gastric lesions as well as acquisition of biopsies for microbiota testing

Colonoscopy with proper biopsy or polypectomy material work-up will be used for identification and stratification of colorectal lesions as well as acquisition of biopsies for microbiota testing

PROCEDUREWhole blood/ Plasma / serum sampling

Whole blood/Plasma/serum sampling will be used to obtain information for group stratification

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTFaecal sampling

Facal samples will be obtained for faecal occult blood testing as well as microbiota analysis

PROCEDUREHistological examination of surgical specimen

Routine histological exam for patients undergoing curative or palliative surgery. Indication for surgery are set based on underlying condition. Study does not interfere with decision making for surgical treatment

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTHeadspace analysis for biological material

VOC analysis from headspace of surgical specimen, biopsy materials, blood/plasma, microbiota etc.

Sponsors

Technion, Israel Institute of Technology
CollaboratorOTHER
Riga East University Hospital
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
JLM Innovation GmbH
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
University of Latvia
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Informed Consent signed * Individual with targeted disease/lesion (tuberculosis, gastric cancer, gastric dysplasia, high/ normal/ low risk gastric lesions, colorectal cancer, high-risk colorectal lesions, low-risk colorectal adenoma, pancreatic cancer, chronic pancreatitis, liver cancer, chronic liver disease, other infectious diseases, oncological diseases of other location)

Exclusion criteria

* Informed Consent not signed * Other active cancer at the time of inclusion for particular study group

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Specific VOC detected2 yearsTuberculosis specific VOC detected in breath and in skin headspace
Performance of nanoarray sensor testing to detect target lesions and diseasesAt the time of breath samplingSensitivity, specificity, overall accuracy of nanoarray sensor testing for VOCs to detect the target lesions in the blinded analysis

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Specific VOC patterns for target disease or lesion and risk groupsAt the time of breath samplingList of VOCs assayed by GC-MS with statistical difference between the study groups
VOC pattern changes following treatmentAt baseline, 3 and/or 6 months after treatment (other time frame according to study group)VOC pattern changes after specific required treatment (medical eradication of bacteria/viruses, surgery/endoscopic removal for cancers or high risk lesion)
VOC pattern changes in relapse of disease for early recognition and treatmentAt baseline, 3 and/or 6 months after treatment (other time frame according to study group)VOC pattern changes at the time of surveillance in case of relapse (malignant diseases).
Groups of gastrointestinal microbiota correlating to VOCsAt the time of samplingList of gastrointestinal microbiota groups (phylum/genus level) with positive correlation to particular VOCs

Countries

Latvia

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026