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  • Prospective Detection of Ea...
    de Vries, Rianne; Farzan, Niloufar; Fabius, Timon; De Jongh, Frans H.C.; Jak, Patrick M.C.; Haarman, Eric G.; Snoey, Erik; In ’T Veen, Johannes C.C.M.; Dagelet, Yennece W.F.; Maitland-Van Der Zee, Anke-Hilse; Lucas, Annelies; Van Den Heuvel, Michel M.; Wolf-Lansdorf, Marguerite; Muller, Mirte; Baas, Paul; Sterk, Peter J.

    Chest, 11/2023, Letnik: 164, Številka: 5
    Journal Article

    Patients with COPD are at high risk of lung cancer developing, but no validated predictive biomarkers have been reported to identify these patients. Molecular profiling of exhaled breath by electronic nose (eNose) technology may qualify for early detection of lung cancer in patients with COPD. Can eNose technology be used for prospective detection of early lung cancer in patients with COPD? BreathCloud is a real-world multicenter, prospective, follow-up study using diagnostic and monitoring visits in day-to-day clinical care of patients with a standardized diagnosis of asthma, COPD, or lung cancer. Breath profiles were collected at inclusion in duplicate by a metal-oxide semiconductor eNose positioned at the rear end of a pneumotachograph (SpiroNose). All patients with COPD were managed according to standard clinical care, and the incidence of clinically diagnosed lung cancer was prospectively monitored for 2 years. Data analysis involved advanced signal processing, ambient air correction, and statistics based on principal component (PC) analysis, linear discriminant analysis, and receiver operating characteristic analysis. Exhaled breath data from 682 patients with COPD and 211 patients with lung cancer were available. Thirty-seven patients with COPD (5.4%) demonstrated clinically manifest lung cancer within 2 years after inclusion. PCs 1, 2, and 3 were significantly different between patients with COPD and those with lung cancer in both training and validation sets with areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUCs) of 0.89 (CI, 0.83-0.95) and 0.86 (CI, 0.81-0.89). The same three PCs showed significant differences (P < .01) at baseline between patients with COPD who did and did not subsequently demonstrate lung cancer within 2 years, with a cross-validation value of 87% and AUC of 0.90 (CI, 0.84-0.95). Exhaled breath analysis by eNose identified patients with COPD in whom lung cancer became clinically manifest within 2 years after inclusion. These results show that eNose assessment may detect early stages of lung cancer in patients with COPD.