| Literature DB >> 26608483 |
Ronny Schnabel1, Rianne Fijten2, Agnieszka Smolinska2, Jan Dallinga2, Marie-Louise Boumans3, Ellen Stobberingh3, Agnes Boots2, Paul Roekaerts1, Dennis Bergmans1, Frederik Jan van Schooten2.
Abstract
Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is a nosocomial infection occurring in the intensive care unit (ICU). The diagnostic standard is based on clinical criteria and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL). Exhaled breath analysis is a promising non-invasive method for rapid diagnosis of diseases and contains volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that can differentiate diseased from healthy individuals. The aim of this study was to determine whether analysis of VOCs in exhaled breath can be used as a non-invasive monitoring tool for VAP. One hundred critically ill patients with clinical suspicion of VAP underwent BAL. Before BAL, exhaled air samples were collected and analysed by gas chromatography time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GC-tof-MS). The clinical suspicion of VAP was confirmed by BAL diagnostic criteria in 32 patients [VAP(+)] and rejected in 68 patients [VAP(-)]. Multivariate statistical comparison of VOC profiles between VAP(+) and VAP(-) revealed a subset of 12 VOCs that correctly discriminated between those two patient groups with a sensitivity and specificity of 75.8% ± 13.5% and 73.0% ± 11.8%, respectively. These results suggest that detection of VAP in ICU patients is possible by examining exhaled breath, enabling a simple, safe and non-invasive approach that could diminish diagnostic burden of VAP.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26608483 PMCID: PMC4660425 DOI: 10.1038/srep17179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Criteria of clinical suspicion of VAP.
| Main criteria | Sub-criteria |
| I. Three or more positive out of the following criteria: | 1. Rectal temperature >38 °C or <35.5 °C |
| 2. Blood leukocytosis (>10.000/μl) and/or left shift or blood leukopenia (<3.000/μl) | |
| 3. More than ten leukocytes in Gram stain of tracheal aspirate (in high-flow field) | |
| 4. Positive culture of tracheal aspirate | |
| II. New, persistent, or progressive infiltrate on chest radiograph |
Characteristics of the patient groups in the study.
| Characteristics | VAP(+) | VAP(−) | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sample size | 32 | 68 | |
| Average age [years] | 64 ± 12 | 60 ± 14.5 | 0.16 |
| Male/Female | 26/6 | 44/24 | 0.07 |
| SOFA at time of BAL | 6.4 ± 3.4 | 6.9 ± 2.9 | 0.41 |
| Severe sepsis | 11 (34%) | 24 (35%) | 0.93 |
| ICU mortality | 12 (38%) | 31 (45%) | 0.45 |
| In hospital mortality | 14 (43%) | 37 (54%) | 0.34 |
| Diagnostic group at admission (p-value = 0.24) | |||
| Gastrointestinal | 4 (13%) | 9 (13%) | |
| Cardiovascular | 9 (28%) | 13 (19%) | |
| Hematologic | 3 (9%) | 15 (22%) | |
| Neurologic | 4 (13%) | 6 (9%) | |
| Orthopaedic/trauma | 4 (13%) | 2 (3%) | |
| Respiratory | 8 (25%) | 20 (29%) | |
| Other | 0 (0%) | 3 (4%) | |
| Presence of comorbidities (p-value = 0.80) | |||
| No comorbidity | 17 (53%) | 38 (56%) | |
| One comorbidityTwo comorbidities | 8 (25%)5 (16%) | 15 (22%)12 (18%) | |
| ≥Three comorbidities | 2 (6%) | 3 (4%) | |
| Distribution of comorbidities (p-value = 0.23) | |||
| cardiovascular | 3 (9%) | 3 (4%) | |
| respiratory | 3 (9%) | 5 (7%) | |
| chronic renal failure | 4 (13%) | 7 (10%) | |
| active malignancy | 2 (6%) | 9 (13%) | |
| immunocompromised | 7 (22%) | 15 (22%) | |
| neurologic impairment | 3 (9%) | 8 (12%) | |
| chronic liver failure | 2 (6%) | 2 (3%) | |
The age and SOFA scores were tested for significance with a two-sided paired t-test; significance was tested for the diagnostic groups using a Chi Square test. P < 0.05 was considered significant. Age and SOFA scores are represented as mean ± standard deviation.
Figure 1ROC and PCA plots visualizing the separation of the VAP(+) and VAP(−) groups.
(A) Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve of VAP(+) vs. VAP(−). It consists of 1-sensitivity on the x-axis and specificity on the y-axis. (B) The PCA plot is based on the proximities between samples of VAP(+) (white) and VAP(−) (black).
Identified VOCs for the comparison between VAP(+) and VAP(−).
| Compound name | CAS nr | Molecular formula | M/z of parent molecule (g mol-1) | Average retention time (min) | Up/Down in VAP(+) vs. VAP(−) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| butane, 2-methyl | 78-78-4 | C5H12 | 72.10 | 2.28 | ↑ |
| Ethanol | 64-17-5 | C2H6O | 46.04 | 2.26 | ↑ |
| Acetone | 67-64-1 | C3H6O | 58.04 | 2.59 | ↓ |
| Isopropyl Alcohol | 67-64-1 | C3H8O | 60.06 | 2.61 | ↓ |
| Acrolein | 107-02-8 | C3H4O | 56.03 | 2.55 | ↓ |
| Furan, tetrahydro- | 109-99-9 | C4H8O | 72.06 | 5.41 | ↓ |
| Heptane | 142-82-5 | C7H16 | 100.13 | 7.25 | ↑ |
| Ethylbenzene | 100-41-4 | C8H10 | 106.08 | 11.49 | ↑ |
| Carane | 17530-24-4 | C10H18 | 138.14 | 14.30 | ↑ |
| Dodecane | 112-40-3 | C12H26 | 170.20 | 17.47 | ↓ |
| Tetradecane | 629-59-4 | C14H30 | 198.23 | 20.46 | ↑ |
| Tetradecanal | 124-25-4 | C14H28O | 212.37 | 23.18 | ↑ |
In addition to the compound name, CAS numbers were added for identification. Up/Down in VAP(+) vs. VAP(−) was based on mean peak height.
KEGG pathways that contained one of the identified VOCs.
| Compound name | KEGG pathway ID | Pathway name | Microorganisms (M), human(H), or both(B) | Produced (P), used (U) or intermediate (I)? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethanol | 00010 | Glycolysis/Gluconeogenesis | B | P |
| 01100 | Metabolic pathways | B | P | |
| 01110 | Biosynthesis of secondary metabolites | M | P | |
| 01120 | Microbial metabolism in diverse environments | M | P | |
| 01130 | Biosynthesis of antibiotics | B | P | |
| 04750 | Inflammatory mediator regulation of TRP channels | H | U | |
| Acrolein | 00982 | drug metabolism – cytochrome P450 | H | P |
For each pathway, the pathway ID and its pathway name as stated in the database are given, and additionally the species in which that pathway is present and whether the compound of interest is an end-product (produced), is being used (used), or is being produced as an intermediate for further utilization (intermediate). *generic pathways, which contain other smaller pathways.