| Literature DB >> 28122528 |
Héctor Guerrero-Flores1, Teresa Apresa-García2, Ónix Garay-Villar3, Alejandro Sánchez-Pérez4, David Flores-Villegas4, Artfy Bandera-Calderón5, Raúl García-Palacios6, Teresita Rojas-Sánchez7, Pablo Romero-Morelos2, Verónica Sánchez-Albor2, Osvaldo Mata2, Víctor Arana-Conejo2, Jesús Badillo-Romero8, Keiko Taniguchi2, Daniel Marrero-Rodríguez2, Mónica Mendoza-Rodríguez2, Miriam Rodríguez-Esquivel2, Víctor Huerta-Padilla2, Andrea Martínez-Castillo2, Irma Hernández-Gallardo1, Ricardo López-Romero2, Cindy Bandala9, Juan Rosales-Guevara10, Mauricio Salcedo11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cervical Cancer (CC) has become a public health concern of alarming proportions in many developing countries such as Mexico, particularly in low income sectors and marginalized regions. As such, an early detection is a key medical factor in improving not only their population's quality of life but also its life expectancy. Interestingly, there has been an increase in the number of reports describing successful attempts at detecting cancer cells in human tissues or fluids using trained (sniffer) dogs. The great odor detection threshold exhibited by dogs is not unheard of. However, this represented a potential opportunity to develop an affordable, accessible, and non-invasive method for detection of CC.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28122528 PMCID: PMC5267360 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2996-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Study design. The figure summed up the time used for training. It is expected that the medical adsorbent surgical bandage or pad could harbor a range of 1 × 10^3–11 cells among other substances and molecules. The background in the narrows depicts tumor tissue (original amplification, 100×) and cervical smear (original amplification, 400×), Hematoxylin and eosin (H&E)-stained
Sensitivity and specificity measurements for cervical scrapes or medical adsorbent surgical bandages detected by a dog in patients with Cervical Cancer (CC)
| Sensitivity (95% CI*) | Specificity (95% CI) | PPV (95% CI) | NPV (95% CI) | PPVα | NPVα | FN | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scrapes | 92,78% (87,12–98,45) | 99,1% (98,37–9,83) | 92,78% (87,1–98,45) | 99,1% (98,37–99,83) | 93,95% | 98,91% | 7 |
| Surgical bandages | 96,36% (90,51–100) | 99,55% (98,8–100) | 96,36% (90,51–100) | 99,55% (98,8–100) | 97,00% | 99,45% | 2 |
*Confidence Interval, PPV Positive Predictive Value, NPV Negative Predictive Value, αPositive and negative predictive values were adjusted to the prevalence of Cervical cancer (CC) in Mexico (13.1% according to GLOBOCAN Project, reference 19), FN False Negative
Fig. 2Medical adsorbent surgical bandages as “adsorber” of several human fluids for cancer detection. The pad could contain a mixture of cells (epithelial healthy and sick cells) and certain other fluids potentiating the cancer odor emitted by the patient. Also presented is the detection of mitochondrial DNA obtained from cells on the surface of the surgical bandage. Lane a) molecular weight marker 100 base pairs (bp) DNA ladder; Lane b) DNA positive control; Lane c) negative control; Lane d) amplicon (150 bp) from control subject without cervical lesion, and Lane e) from a Cervical cancer patient-affected (CC)
Fig. 3Comparison of gas chromatograph-mass spectrometry (volatile organic compounds) of adsorbent bandages used by healthy and Cervical Cancer-affected women. After usage of the adsorbent pads during 8 hours, these were subjected to an analysis by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The compounds were obtained by using the experimental conditions: hexane at 4°C with DB-column of 1.25 mm×60 m×0.25-μm and Helium gas carrier by employing Agilent gas chromatography-mass spectrometry equipment. The upper chromatogram represents a healthy woman, and the lower chromatogram from a Cervical Cancer-affected patient. The x-axis represents the time retention in minutes, while the y-axis the curve area. The graph is showing an example of mass spectrum of the following organic compounds: Oxirane; 2-methyl-3-propyl-trans; 5 H Tetrazol-5-amine; Eicosane and Dibutyl phthalate (DP) presented in the healthy women (Healthy chromatogram), while the 3 Ethyl-3-methyl heptane; 3,3 Dimethyl-1 [2 carboxyphenyl] triazine; and DP in the cancer patient (Cervical Cancer chromatogram), where a clear difference in DP concentrations between women was observed (vertical red rectangle). Chemical structure of the organic compounds is also showed