4.7 Review

Volatile Organic Compounds in Exhaled Breath as Fingerprints of Lung Cancer, Asthma and COPD

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm10010032

Keywords

analytical platforms; markers of respiratory diseases; lung cancer; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; asthma

Funding

  1. National Centre for Research and Development (Warsaw, Poland) [POLTUR2/4/2018]
  2. Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange [PPI/APM/2018/1/00036/U/001]

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Lung cancer, COPD, and asthma are inflammatory diseases with increasing global prevalence, causing physical and psychological distress to patients while incurring high societal costs. Analyzing trace VOCs in exhaled breath has the potential to provide cheaper, rapid, and non-invasive screening procedures for diagnosing and monitoring lung diseases, but challenges remain in terms of research consensus and clinical implementation.
Lung cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and asthma are inflammatory diseases that have risen worldwide, posing a major public health issue, encompassing not only physical and psychological morbidity and mortality, but also incurring significant societal costs. The leading cause of death worldwide by cancer is that of the lung, which, in large part, is a result of the disease often not being detected until a late stage. Although COPD and asthma are conditions with considerably lower mortality, they are extremely distressful to people and involve high healthcare overheads. Moreover, for these diseases, diagnostic methods are not only costly but are also invasive, thereby adding to people's stress. It has been appreciated for many decades that the analysis of trace volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in exhaled breath could potentially provide cheaper, rapid, and non-invasive screening procedures to diagnose and monitor the above diseases of the lung. However, after decades of research associated with breath biomarker discovery, no breath VOC tests are clinically available. Reasons for this include the little consensus as to which breath volatiles (or pattern of volatiles) can be used to discriminate people with lung diseases, and our limited understanding of the biological origin of the identified VOCs. Lung disease diagnosis using breath VOCs is challenging. Nevertheless, the numerous studies of breath volatiles and lung disease provide guidance as to what volatiles need further investigation for use in differential diagnosis, highlight the urgent need for non-invasive clinical breath tests, illustrate the way forward for future studies, and provide significant guidance to achieve the goal of developing non-invasive diagnostic tests for lung disease. This review provides an overview of these issues from evaluating key studies that have been undertaken in the years 2010-2019, in order to present objective and comprehensive updated information that presents the progress that has been made in this field. The potential of this approach is highlighted, while strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats are discussed. This review will be of interest to chemists, biologists, medical doctors and researchers involved in the development of analytical instruments for breath diagnosis.

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