4.8 Article

Silicon Nanowire Sensors Enable Diagnosis of Patients via Exhaled Breath

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages 7047-7057

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.6b03127

Keywords

nanowire; sensor; disease; cancer; diagnosis; breath; volatile organic compound

Funding

  1. FP7-Health Program under the LCAOS [258868]
  2. Horizon 2020 ICT Program under the SNIFFPHONE [644031]
  3. council for higher education in the Israeli government
  4. Latvian Council of Science [305/2012]

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Two of the biggest challenges in medicine today are the need to detect diseases in a noninvasive manner and to differentiate between patients using a single diagnostic tool. The current study targets these two challenges by developing a molecularly modified silicon nanowire field effect transistor (SiNW FET) and showing its use in the detection and classification of many disease breathprints (lung cancer, gastric cancer, asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease). The fabricated SiNW FETs are characterized and optimized based on a training set that correlate their sensitivity and selectivity toward volatile organic compounds (VOCs) linked with the various disease breathprints. The best sensors obtained in the training set are then examined under real-world clinical conditions, using breath samples from 374 subjects. Analysis of the clinical samples show that the optimized SiNW FETs can detect and discriminate between almost all binary comparisons of the diseases under examination with >80% accuracy. Overall, this approach has the potential to support detection of many diseases in a direct harmless way, which can reassure patients and prevent numerous unpleasant investigations.

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