4.3 Review

The need for multicomponent gas standards for breath biomarker analysis

Journal

JOURNAL OF BREATH RESEARCH
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1752-7163/ac70ef

Keywords

biomarkers; gas standards; reference materials; volatile organic compounds

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Exhaled breath is an informative and non-invasive matrix for diagnosing or monitoring diseases, although there are few established breath tests in practice. This review discusses the importance of gas standards in supporting breath analysis and highlights the need for multicomponent gas standards with specific concentrations. It also explores the relevance of existing atmospheric gas standards and ongoing research to develop breath-relevant gas standards.
Exhaled breath is a non-invasive, information-rich matrix with the potential to diagnose or monitor disease, including infectious disease. Despite significant effort dedicated to biomarker identification in case control studies, very few breath tests are established in practice. In this topical review, we identify how gas standards support breath analysis today and what is needed to support further expansion and translation to practice. We examine forensic and clinical breath tests and discuss how confidence has been built through unambiguous biomarker identification and quantitation supported by gas calibration standards. Based on this discussion, we identify a need for multicomponent gas standards with part-per-trillion to part-per-million concentrations. We highlight National Institute of Standards and Technology gas standards developed for atmospheric measurements that are also relevant to breath analysis and describe investigations of long-term stability, chemical reactions, and interactions with gas cylinder wall treatments. An overview of emerging online instruments and their need for gas standards is also presented. This review concludes with a discussion of our ongoing research to examine the feasibility of producing multicomponent gas standards at breath-relevant concentrations. Such standards could be used to investigate interference from ubiquitous endogenous compounds and as a starting point for standards tailored to specific breath tests.

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