AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study focused on characterizing the background signal of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the headspace of sputum samples from severe asthma patients, aiming to assess variations over different days and times in a clinical setting.
  • - Researchers continuously collected headspace samples without biological material from 11am to 3pm over the workweek and analyzed them using advanced techniques, identifying 1120 features, with 37 being consistently present.
  • - Findings indicated that most background VOC levels showed no significant day-to-day variation, except for benzothiazole, which increased during the day; these results underline the importance of accounting for background signals in biomarker research.

Article Abstract

The headspace of a biological sample contains exogenous volatile organic compounds (VOCs) present within the sampling environment which represent the background signal. This study aimed to characterise the background signal generated from a headspace sampling system in a clinical site, to evaluate intra- and inter-day variation of background VOC and to understand the impact of a sample itself upon commonly reported background VOC using sputum headspace samples from severe asthmatics. The headspace, in absence of a biological sample, was collected hourly from 11am to 3pm within a day (time of clinical samples acquisition), and from Monday to Friday in a week, and analysed by thermal desorption-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (TD-GC-MS). Chemometric analysis identified 1120 features, 37 of which were present in at least the 80% of all the samples. The analyses of intra- and inter-day background variations were performed on 13 of the most abundant features, ubiquitously present in headspace samples. The concentration ratios relative to background were reported for the selected abundant VOC in 36 asthmatic sputum samples, acquired from 36 stable severe asthma patients recruited at Glenfield Hospital, Leicester, UK. The results identified no significant intra- or inter-day variations in compounds levels and no systematic bias of-scores, with the exclusion of benzothiazole, whose abundance increased linearly between 11am and 3pm with a maximal intra-day fold change of 2.13. Many of the identified background features are reported in literature as components of headspace of biological samples and are considered potential biomarkers for several diseases. The selected background features were identified in headspace of all severe asthma sputum samples, albeit with varying levels of enrichment relative to background. Our observations support the need to consider the background signal derived from the headspace sampling system when developing and validating headspace biomarker signatures using clinical samples.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1752-7163/abcd2aDOI Listing

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