Journal
SENSORS
Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages -Publisher
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s22031238
Keywords
breath analysis; volatile organic compounds; sensors; nanomaterials; differential diagnosis
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Early-stage disease diagnosis is vital for effective treatment. Non-invasive diagnostic tools, such as breath analysis, have gained significant research interest. This review provides an overview of sensor categories and highlights the role of nanomaterials in detecting exhaled gas-analytes. Furthermore, it discusses the applicability of breath analysis in differential diagnosis, phenotyping, and disease staging.
Early-stage disease diagnosis is of particular importance for effective patient identification as well as their treatment. Lack of patient compliance for the existing diagnostic methods, however, limits prompt diagnosis, rendering the development of non-invasive diagnostic tools mandatory. One of the most promising non-invasive diagnostic methods that has also attracted great research interest during the last years is breath analysis; the method detects gas-analytes such as exhaled volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and inorganic gases that are considered to be important biomarkers for various disease-types. The diagnostic ability of gas-pattern detection using analytical techniques and especially sensors has been widely discussed in the literature; however, the incorporation of novel nanomaterials in sensor-development has also proved to enhance sensor performance, for both selective and cross-reactive applications. The aim of the first part of this review is to provide an up-to-date overview of the main categories of sensors studied for disease diagnosis applications via the detection of exhaled gas-analytes and to highlight the role of nanomaterials. The second and most novel part of this review concentrates on the remarkable applicability of breath analysis in differential diagnosis, phenotyping, and the staging of several disease-types, which are currently amongst the most pressing challenges in the field.
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