February 29, 2012

Electronic Nose Can Smell Out Mesothelioma

I came across an interesting study today.  An electronic nose can distinguish between people with malignant pleural malignant, those who have been exposed to asbestos but do not have the disease, and normal controls.  I really liked the name of the electronic nose, the Cyranose 320.

Abstract

Background: Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma (MPM) is a tumour of the surface cells of the pleura that is highly aggressive and mainly caused by asbestos exposure. Electronic noses capture the spectrum of exhaled volatile organic compounds (VOCs) providing a composite biomarker profile (breathprint).


Objective: We tested the hypothesis that an electronic nose can discriminate exhaled air of patients with MPM from subjects with a similar long-term professional exposure to asbestos without MPM and from healthy controls.

Methods: 13 patients with a histology confirmed diagnosis of MPM (age 60.9±12.2 year), 13 subjects with certified, long-term professional asbestos exposure (age 67.2±9.8), and 13 healthy subjects without asbestos exposure (age 52.2±16.2) participated in a cross-sectional study. Exhaled breath was collected by a previously described method and sampled by an electronic nose (Cyranose 320). Breathprints were analyzed by canonical discriminant analysis on principal component reduction. Cross-validated accuracy (CVA) was calculated.

Results: Breathprints from patients with MPM were separated from subjects with asbestos exposure (CVA: 80.8%, sensitivity 92.3%, specificity 85.7%). MPM was also distinguished from healthy controls (CVA: 84.6%). Repeated measurements confirmed these results.

Conclusions: Molecular pattern recognition of exhaled breath can correctly distinguish patients with MPM from subjects with similar occupational asbestos exposure without MPM and from healthy controls. This suggests that breathprints obtained by electronic nose have diagnostic potential for MPM.

February 16, 2012

Living with Cancer--a Young Oncologist's Experience

I have a membership in a website, Oncostat, that provides periodic emails with links to cancer journal articles and analyses.  Today I found an article by an oncologist who learned that he had a rare kind of cancer just as he was entering his residency.  His article follows his response to his father's cancer, his reaction to his own cancer, and its affect on his work with his patients.  I've been planning to write a post about what it's like to live under a death sentence, but I just haven't done it.  I'll probably wait until my prognosis is clearer, but his article provides an interesting perspective on living with cancer and the uncertainty of individual prognoses.

http://jco.ascopubs.org/content/early/2011/04/04/JCO.2011.35.1122.full.pdf

David