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A benchmarking protocol for breath analysis: the peppermint experiment

Authors :
Ruszkiewicz, Dorota M.
Wilkinson, Max
Beauchamp, Jonathan D.
Cristescu, Simona M.
Fowler, Stephen J.
Salman, Dahlia
Di Francesco, Fabio
Koppen, Gudrun
Langejürgen, Jens
Holz, Olaf
Hadjithekli, Andria
Moreno, Sergi
Pedrotti, Michele
Sinues, Pablo
Slingers, Gitte
Wilde, Michael
Lomonaco, Tommaso
Zanella, Delphine
Zenobi, Renato
Focant, Jean-François
Grassin-Delyle, Stanislas
Franchina, Flavio Antonio
Màlàskova, Michaela
Stefanuto, Pierre-Hugues
Pugliese, Giovanni
Mayhew, Christopher
Thomas, C. L. Paul
Source :
Journal of Breath Research, 14 (4)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
ETH Zurich, 2020.

Abstract

Sampling of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) has shown promise for detection of a range of diseases but results have proved hard to replicate due to a lack of standardization. In this work we introduce the 'Peppermint Initiative'. The initiative seeks to disseminate a standardized experiment that allows comparison of breath sampling and data analysis methods. Further, it seeks to share a set of benchmark values for the measurement of VOCs in breath. Pilot data are presented to illustrate the standardized approach to the interpretation of results obtained from the Peppermint experiment. This pilot study was conducted to determine the washout profile of peppermint compounds in breath, identify appropriate sampling time points, and formalise the data analysis. Five and ten participants were recruited to undertake a standardized intervention by ingesting a peppermint oil capsule that engenders a predictable and controlled change in the VOC profile in exhaled breath. After collecting a pre-ingestion breath sample, five further samples are taken at 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 h after ingestion. Samples were analysed using ion mobility spectrometry coupled to multi-capillary column and thermal desorption gas chromatography mass spectrometry. A regression analysis of the washout data was used to determine sampling times for the final peppermint protocol, and the time for the compound measurement to return to baseline levels was selected as a benchmark value. A measure of the quality of the data generated from a given technique is proposed by comparing data fidelity. This study protocol has been used for all subsequent measurements by the Peppermint Consortium (16 partners from seven countries). So far 1200 breath samples from 200 participants using a range of sampling and analytical techniques have been collected. The data from the consortium will be disseminated in subsequent technical notes focussing on results from individual platforms.<br />Journal of Breath Research, 14 (4)<br />ISSN:1752-7155<br />ISSN:1752-7163

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17527155 and 17527163
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Breath Research, 14 (4)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....89c488fa0418757fc9b0c883d3593e21
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000440516