Volatile Organic Compound Assessment as a Screening Tool for Early Detection of Gastrointestinal Diseases

Author:

Dalis Costa1,Mesfin Fikir M.1,Manohar Krishna1,Liu Jianyun1ORCID,Shelley W. Christopher1ORCID,Brokaw John P.1,Markel Troy A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA

Abstract

Gastrointestinal (GI) diseases have a high prevalence throughout the United States. Screening and diagnostic modalities are often expensive and invasive, and therefore, people do not utilize them effectively. Lack of proper screening and diagnostic assessment may lead to delays in diagnosis, more advanced disease at the time of diagnosis, and higher morbidity and mortality rates. Research on the intestinal microbiome has demonstrated that dysbiosis, or unfavorable alteration of organismal composition, precedes the onset of clinical symptoms for various GI diseases. GI disease diagnostic research has led to a shift towards non-invasive methods for GI screening, including chemical-detection tests that measure changes in volatile organic compounds (VOCs), which are the byproducts of bacterial metabolism that result in the distinct smell of stool. Many of these tools are expensive, immobile benchtop instruments that require highly trained individuals to interpret the results. These attributes make them difficult to implement in clinical settings. Alternatively, electronic noses (E-noses) are relatively cheaper, handheld devices that utilize multi-sensor arrays and pattern recognition technology to analyze VOCs. The purpose of this review is to (1) highlight how dysbiosis impacts intestinal diseases and how VOC metabolites can be utilized to detect alterations in the microbiome, (2) summarize the available VOC analytical platforms that can be used to detect aberrancies in intestinal health, (3) define the current technological advancements and limitations of E-nose technology, and finally, (4) review the literature surrounding several intestinal diseases in which headspace VOCs can be used to detect or predict disease.

Funder

NIH

American College of Surgeon’s Clowe’s Memorial Career Development Award

Chan Zuckerberg Initative

Indiana University Research Support Funds Grant, Riley Children’s Foundation, IU Department of Surgery

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Microbiology (medical),Microbiology

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