4.7 Article

Virus-induced Volatile Organic Compounds Are Detectable in Exhaled Breath during Pulmonary Infection

Journal

Publisher

AMER THORACIC SOC
DOI: 10.1164/rccm.202103-0660OC

Keywords

chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; rhinovirus; volatile organic compound; viral infection

Funding

  1. HCA Healthcare Research Grant
  2. Wellcome Trust Seed Award in Science [215275/Z/19/Z]
  3. Medical Research Council clinician scientist fellowship [MR/V000098/1]
  4. Institut Merieux Project Grant
  5. National Institute for Health Research senior investigator award
  6. Wellcome Trust [215275/Z/19/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Exhaled breath volatile organic compounds can distinguish viral from bacterial infection in COPD. Specific compounds in exhaled breath correlate with viral burden, antiviral immune responses, and exacerbation severity, suggesting their potential as rapid, noninvasive biomarkers of viral infection in COPD.
Rationale: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a condition punctuated by acute exacerbations commonly triggered by viral and/or bacterial infection. Early identification of exacerbation triggers is important to guide appropriate therapy, but currently available tests are slow and imprecise. Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) can be detected in exhaled breath and have the potential to be rapid tissue-specific biomarkers of infection etiology. Objectives: To determine whether volatile organic compound measurement could distinguish viral from bacterial infection in COPD. Methods: We used serial sampling within in vitro and in vivo studies to elucidate the dynamic changes that occur in VOC production during acute respiratory viral infection. Highly sensitive gas chromatography-mass spectrometry techniques were used to measure VOC production from infected airway epithelial-cell cultures and in exhaled breath samples from healthy subjects experimentally challenged with rhinovirus (RV)-A16 and from subjects with COPD with naturally occurring exacerbations. Measurements and Main Results: We identified a novel VOC signature comprising decane and other long-chain alkane compounds that is induced during RV infection of cultured airway epithelial cells and is also increased in the exhaled breath from healthy subjects experimentally challenged with RV and from patients with COPD during naturally occurring viral exacerbations. These compounds correlated with the magnitude of antiviral immune responses, viral burden, and exacerbation severity but were not induced by bacterial infection, suggesting that they represent a specific virus-inducible signature. Conclusions: Our study highlights the potential for measurement of exhaled breath VOCs as rapid, noninvasive biomarkers of viral infection. Further studies are needed to determine whether measurement of these signatures could be used to guide more targeted therapy with antibiotic/antiviral agents for COPD exacerbations.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available