Researchers have developed a relatively simple
breath analysis test that may one day be used as a way to screen for colorectal
cancer. Researchers at the University Aldo Moro of Bari in Italy, including
Donato F. Altomare, MD, of the department of emergency and organ
transplantation, have developed a way to analyze the volatile organic compounds
(VOCs) found in cancer patients, but not in their healthy counterparts. This
pilot study has demonstrated a different metabolite profile of those subjects
with colon cancer compared to healthy subjects. The research is published in theBritish Journal of Surgery.
Using recently developed tools that can analyze
different micromolecules that reflect the body’s cellular metabolic processes,
the study authors analyzed the unique metabolite profiles of subjects using
breath samples. In contrast to other types of samples from which metabolites
can be processed including stool, urine, serum, and sputum, breath samples are
noninvasive and are projected to have a high patient compliance.
Because cell metabolism is altered in cancer
cells, the molecular products and byproducts they produce are different from
normal cells, in quality and quantity.
The Study Design
Altomare and colleagues first identified
specific VOCs that may differ between patients with colon cancer and those who
are cancer-free. The most likely VOCs among cancer patients are likely reactive
oxygen species, among others. These metabolites, in theory, travel from their
origin within the body to the lungs where they are exhaled, according to the
authors.
Almost all the molecules the researchers
identified “can be found in the breath of healthy people,” said Altomare, but
in cancer patients, “their proportion or pattern is changed.”
Breath samples were collected from 37 patients
with colon cancer prior to their undergoing surgery for their cancer. Patients
with comorbidities such as diabetes and other diseases were excluded so as to
not confound the metabolite analysis. The samples of these patients were
compared to 41 healthy controls who had undergone a colon cancer screening and
found to be disease-free. All samples were analyzed using gas chromatography
linked to mass spectrometry.
The initial analysis identified 15 different
VOCs, out of 58 total, that could differentiate between cancer-positive and
negative individuals. There were no sex-based differences among the VOC
profiles nor did the profiles distinguish between early- and late-stage colon
cancer patients.
Statistical analysis showed that the VOC
profile had an 85% predictive accuracy, an 86% sensitivity, and a specificity
of 83%. The analysis resulted in five false negatives and seven false
positives.
Using a follow-up, independent and blinded
cohort of 15 colorectal cancer patients and 10 noncancer controls, the accuracy
of the test was 76%. Three false positives and three false negatives occurred.
Lower cost, easy to execute screening
procedures are needed for colon cancer that could rival the sensitivity and
specificity of colonoscopies. Colon cancer is the third leading cause of death
from cancer in the United States and the second in Europe.
“We do hope this proportion could further
improve with the availability of new devices to collect the breath sample and
with further studies to understand the specificity of the pattern of VOCs
identified compared to the disease's state,” Altomare said. Altomare added that
this accuracy is already better than traditional screening tests such at the
fecal occult blood test and immunochemistry-based tests.
While differential VOC patterns have been
demonstrated for lung, prostate, breast, and colorectal cancers as well as for
melanoma and hepatocellular carcinoma, among others, this is the first clinical
assessment of VOCs in colorectal patients compared with their non-cancer
counterparts, according to Altomare. This study is also the first to identify a
specific pattern of VOCs in cancer patients.
The collected breath samples need to be
analyzed within a few days using specialized equipment including gas
chromatography and mass spectrometry as well as computer statistical software.
This study provides early support for this
screening method, but this technique is still in the early stages of
development, in part because the field of analyzing many metabolic molecules,
called “metabolomics” is fairly new. Further development of the technique and
much more testing is necessary. A recent study has also demonstrated that the
breath of cancer patients—breast, lung, colorectal, and prostate—is distinct from
noncancer subjects.
The authors of the current study note that this
tool could also be useful to diagnose benign gastrointestinal disorders such as
lactose intolerance and cystic fibrosis, among others. However, since each
disease appears to have a different VOC profile, analysis of these different
diseases will be distinct.
A larger study is being planned that will also
look for new ways to analyze the results, according to Altomare. A comparison
of the breath test with the fecal occult blood test as well as developing the
test to detect colonic polyps are also in the works.
“Studies to set up an electronic nose is
underway in collaboration with Gianluigi de Gennaro from the chemical
department of University of Bari, which we hope will further make the
colorectal cancer screening by breath analysis easier and available as a screening
tool for the general population,” said Altomare.
By Anna Azvolinsky, PhD1 | December
7, 2012
1Freelance Science Writer and CancerNetwork Contributor.
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