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Exhaled volatile organic compounds for phenotyping chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a cross-sectional study
Authors:Maria Basanta  Baharudin Ibrahim  Rachel Dockry  David Douce  Mike Morris  Dave Singh  Ashley Woodcock  Stephen J Fowler
Institution:1.Respiratory Research Group, Faculty of Medical and Human Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, and NIHR Translational Research Facility in Respiratory Medicine, University Hospital of South Manchester, Southmoor Road, Manchester M23 9LT, UK;2.Waters Corporation, Manchester, UK;3.Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Preston, UK
Abstract:

Background

Non-invasive phenotyping of chronic respiratory diseases would be highly beneficial in the personalised medicine of the future. Volatile organic compounds can be measured in the exhaled breath and may be produced or altered by disease processes. We investigated whether distinct patterns of these compounds were present in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and clinically relevant disease phenotypes.

Methods

Breath samples from 39 COPD subjects and 32 healthy controls were collected and analysed using gas chromatography time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Subjects with COPD also underwent sputum induction. Discriminatory compounds were identified by univariate logistic regression followed by multivariate analysis: 1. principal component analysis; 2. multivariate logistic regression; 3. receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis.

Results

Comparing COPD versus healthy controls, principal component analysis clustered the 20 best-discriminating compounds into four components explaining 71% of the variance. Multivariate logistic regression constructed an optimised model using two components with an accuracy of 69%. The model had 85% sensitivity, 50% specificity and ROC area under the curve of 0.74. Analysis of COPD subgroups showed the method could classify COPD subjects with far greater accuracy. Models were constructed which classified subjects with ≥2% sputum eosinophilia with ROC area under the curve of 0.94 and those having frequent exacerbations 0.95. Potential biomarkers correlated to clinical variables were identified in each subgroup.

Conclusion

The exhaled breath volatile organic compound profile discriminated between COPD and healthy controls and identified clinically relevant COPD subgroups. If these findings are validated in prospective cohorts, they may have diagnostic and management value in this disease.
Keywords:Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease  Biomarkers  Breath tests  Metabolomics
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