Faecal volatile organic compounds in preterm babies at risk of necrotising enterocolitis: the DOVE study

Author:

Probert Chris,Greenwood Rosemary,Mayor Arno,Hughes David,Aggio Raphael,Jackson Rachel Elizabeth,Simcox Liz,Barrow Heather,García-Finana Marta,Ewer Andrew KORCID

Abstract

BackgroundEarly diagnosis of necrotising enterocolitis (NEC) may improve prognosis but there are no proven biomarkers.ObjectiveTo investigate changes in faecal volatile organic compounds (VOCs) as potential biomarkers for NEC.DesignMulticentre prospective study.Settings8 UK neonatal units.PatientsPreterm infants <34 weeks gestation.MethodsDaily faecal samples were collected prospectively from 1326 babies of whom 49 subsequently developed definite NEC. Faecal samples from 32 NEC cases were compared with samples from frequency-matched controls without NEC. Headspace, solid phase microextraction gas chromatography/mass spectrometry was performed and VOCs identified from reference libraries. VOC samples from cases and controls were compared using both discriminant and factor analysis methods.ResultsVOCs were found to cluster into nine groups (factors), three were associated with NEC and indicated the possibility of disease up to 3–4 days before the clinical diagnosis was established. For one factor, a 1 SD increase increased the odds of developing NEC by 1.6 times; a similar decrease of the two other factors was associated with a reduced risk (OR 0.5 or 0.7, respectively). Discriminant analyses identified five individual VOCs, which are associated with NEC in babies at risk, each with an area under the receiver operating characteristics curve of 0.75–0.76, up to 4 days before the clinical diagnosis was made.ConclusionsFaecal VOCs are altered in preterm infants with NEC. These data are currently insufficient to enable reliable cotside detection of babies at risk of developing NEC and further work is needed investigate the role of VOCs in clarifying the aetiology of NEC.

Funder

The Henry Smith Charity

Action Medical Research

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Obstetrics and Gynecology,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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