| Literature DB >> 26317039 |
Kamila Schmidt1, Ian Podmore1.
Abstract
An early diagnosis and appropriate treatment are crucial in reducing mortality among people suffering from cancer. There is a lack of characteristic early clinical symptoms in most forms of cancer, which highlights the importance of investigating new methods for its early detection. One of the most promising methods is the analysis of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). VOCs are a diverse group of carbon-based chemicals that are present in exhaled breath and biofluids and may be collected from the headspace of these matrices. Different patterns of VOCs have been correlated with various diseases, cancer among them. Studies have also shown that cancer cells in vitro produce or consume specific VOCs that can serve as potential biomarkers that differentiate them from noncancerous cells. This review identifies the current challenges in the investigation of VOCs as potential cancer biomarkers, by the critical evaluation of available matrices for the in vivo and in vitro approaches in this field and by comparison of the main extraction and detection techniques that have been applied to date in this area of study. It also summarises complementary in vivo, ex vivo, and in vitro studies conducted to date in order to try to identify volatile biomarkers of cancer.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26317039 PMCID: PMC4437398 DOI: 10.1155/2015/981458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomark ISSN: 2090-7699
Analytical technique used, cancer cell lines studied, and type of matrix and control used in in vitro studies aiming to investigate VOCs as potential cancer biomarkers. DNTD: dynamic needle trap device; ESI: electrospray ionisation; GC-MS: gas chromatography-mass spectrometry; MC: multicolumn; Mm: metastatic melanoma cell; ns: not specified; NSCLC: non-small-cell lung cancer; p: preconcentration; PT: purge and trap; PTR-MS: proton transfer reaction-mass spectrometry; RPG: radial growth cell; SCLC: small-cell lung cancer; SIFT-MS: selected ion flow tube-mass spectrometry; SPME: solid phase microextraction; VPG: vertical growth cell.
| Analytical technique used | Cancer type | Cell lines studied | Control | Type of matrix | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SPME-GC-MS | Lung cancer | A549 | OUS11 and WI-38 VA 13 | Cell-free culture medium | [ |
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| SPME-GC-MS | Skin cancer |
| FOM136, FOM191, and pure medium | Cell-free culture medium | [ |
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| SPME-GC-MS | Lung cancer | A549, SK-MEM-1, and NCIH 446 | BEAS2B | Cell-free culture medium | [ |
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| SPME-GC-MS | Colon cancer | SW1116 and SW480 | NCM460, pure medium | Culture medium with cells | [ |
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| SPME-GC-MS | Lung cancer | Primary lung cancer cells | Primary normal cells (human lung cells, lipocytes, osteogenic cells, and rat taste bud cells) | Cell-free culture medium | [ |
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| SPME-GC-MS | Lung cancer | A549 | Pure medium | Culture medium with cells | [ |
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| Nanosensors (quartz microbalances), | Melanoma, synovial sarcoma, and thyroid cancer | Primary cells | Pure medium | Culture medium with cells | [ |
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| Ultra II SKC-GC-MS, | Lung cancer |
| Pure medium | Culture medium with cells | [ |
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| Ultra II SKC-GC-MS, | Lung cancer |
| IBE, pure medium | Culture medium with cells | [ |
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| ORBOTM 420 Tenax TA sorption tubes-GC-MS, | Liver cancer | MHCC97-H, MHCC97-L, HepG2, SMMC-7721, and BEL-7402 | L-02 | Culture medium with cells | [ |
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| PT-GC-MS | Lung cancer | Calu-1 | Pure medium | Culture medium with cells | [ |
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| PT-GC-MS | Lung cancer | NCI-H2087 | Pure medium | Culture medium with cells | [ |
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| PT-GC-MS | Lung cancer | A549 | HBEpC, hFB, and pure medium | Culture medium with cells | [ |
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| DNTD-GC-MS | Liver cancer | HepG2 | Pure medium | Culture medium with cells | [ |
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| pMC-GC-MS | Leukaemia | HL60 | Pure medium | Culture medium with cells | [ |
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| SIFT-MS | Breast cancer | MCF-7 and MCF-7Adr | ns | Cell lysate | [ |
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| p-SIFT-MS | Breast, leukaemia, cervical, and prostate cancer | MCF-7, MCF-7Adr, HeLa S3, K562, LNCaP, and DU-145 | Solid residue left after centrifugation | Cell lysate | [ |
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| p-SIFT-MS | Breast cancer | MCF-7 and MCF-7Adr | Solid residue left after centrifugation | Cell lysate | [ |
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| SIFT-MS | Lung cancer | CALU1 | NL20, pure medium | Medium with cells | [ |
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| PTR-MS | Lung cancer | A549 and EPLC | hTERT-RPE1, BEAS2B, and pure medium | Medium with cells | [ |
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| SIFT-MS | Lung cancer | Calu1 and SK-MEM-1 | Pure medium | Medium with cells | [ |
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| SIFT-MS | Lung cancer | Calu-1 | NL20, 35FL121 Tel+, and pure medium | Medium with cells | [ |
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| Online (ESI)MS | Breast cancer | T47D, SKBR-3, and MDA-MB-231 | HMLE | Cell-free culture medium | [ |
Volatile organic compounds detected in both the exhaled breath of lung cancer patients and the HS of lung cancer tissues in studies that simultaneously investigated VOCs ex vivo and in vivo. Only VOCs that have also been previously detected in the HS of cancer cells in vitro in other studies are listed.
| Class | Volatile organic compound | Reference |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Alkanes | Pentane | [ | [ |
| Hexane | [ | [ | |
| Octane | [ | [ | |
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| Branched alkanes | 2-Methylpentane | [ | [ |
| 3-Methylpentane | [ | [ | |
| 2,3,4-Trimethylpentane | [ | [ | |
| 4-Methyloctane | [ | [ | |
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| Alkenes | 2-Methyl-1-pentene | [ | [ |
| 2,4-Dimethyl-1-heptene | [ | [ | |
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| Alcohols | Ethanol | [ | [ |
| 1-Propanol | [ | [ | |
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| Aldehydes | Acetaldehyde | [ | [ |
| Acrolein | [ | [ | |
| Hexanal | [ | [ | |
| 3-Methylbutanal | [ | [ | |
| 2-Methylpropanal | [ | [ | |
| 2-Methylbutanal | [ | [ | |
| Benzaldehyde | [ | [ | |
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| Ketones | Acetone | [ | [ |
| 2-Butanone | [ | [ | |
| 2-Pentanone | [ | [ | |
| 2-Hexanone | [ | [ | |
| 6-Methyl-5-hepten-2-one | [ | [ | |
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| Carboxylic acids | Acetic acid | [ | [ |
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| Ethers | Diethyl ether | [ | [ |
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| Pyrroles | Pyrrole | [ | [ |
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| Nitriles | Acetonitrile | [ | [ |
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| Aromatics | o-Xylene | [ | [ |
| p-Xylene | [ | [ | |
| Ethylbenzene | [ | [ | |
| Styrene | [ | [ | |
Figure 1Diagram of analysis with online purge and trap-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (PT-GC-MS).
Figure 2Diagram of analysis with solid phase microextraction-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (SPME-GC-MS).
Main characteristics of analytical techniques used in the studies of VOCs as potential cancer biomarkers. GC-MS: gas chromatography-mass spectrometry; IMS: ion mobility spectrometry; MCC: multicapillary column; PTR-MS: proton transfer reaction-mass spectrometry; SIFT-MS: selected ion flow tube-mass spectrometry.
| Analytical technique | Sensitivity | Quantification | Mode | Compound identification |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GC-MS | Sub-ppb-low ppt1 [ | Semiquantitative | Offline | Reliable |
| PTR-MS | Low ppb-low ppt [ | Absolute | Real-time | Tentative |
| SIFT-MS | Sub-ppb-low ppb [ | Absolute | Real-time | Reliable |
| MCC-IMS | ppb-ppt [ | Absolute | Real-time | Tentative |
| e-noses | Low ppb [ | Semiquantitative | Real-time | — |
1With preconcentration.