Health news
Health news top Health news

   Login  |  Register    
Health News Make AMN Your Home PageDiscussion BoardsAdvanced Search ToolMedical RSS/XML News FeedHealth news
  You are here : Health.am > Health Centers > Cancer Health CenterLung Cancer news

Gold nanotech breath test may show lung cancer early

Lung Cancer newsAug 31, 2009

A sensor made with gold nanoparticles can detect lung cancer in a patient’s breath and may offer a diagnosis before tumors show up on an x-ray, Israeli scientists said on Sunday.

The device, which the developers say would be cheap enough for everyday use by family doctors, detected lung cancer with 86 percent accuracy and may offer a way to screen for a disease not usually diagnosed until it has spread and is no longer curable.

It uses sensors based on gold nanoparticles to detect specific compounds—volatile organic compounds (VOC)—that lung cancer patients have in high levels in exhaled breath.

Breath testing is already recognized as a way of linking specific VOCs in exhaled breath to a certain medical conditions. In 2006, researchers found dogs could be trained to smell cancer on the breath of patients with 99 percent accuracy.

Hossam Haick, one of the scientists working on the sensor, said he hoped it could soon allow doctors to have a simple test at hand to screen people during routine appointments.

“Conventional diagnostic methods for lung cancer are unsuitable for widespread screening because they are expensive and occasionally miss tumors,” Haick and colleagues wrote in Nature Nanotechnology.

“This device is not at all expensive. The whole idea in this development was to devise something very sensitive, and very cheap and very portable,” Haick, of the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, told Reuters.

Lung cancer kills 1.3 million people a year and is the leading cause of cancer death across the world. Only 15 percent of patients live more than 5 years, in part because the disease is usually diagnosed so late.

The device developed by Haick and his colleagues is a nine-sensor array consisting of gold nanoparticles combined with different organic groups that respond to various VOCs released by lung tumors.

They tested 56 healthy people and 40 patients who had been diagnosed with lung cancer using conventional methods.

They found the sensor could distinguish the breath of lung cancer patients from the of the control group with more than 86 percent accuracy.

Haick said the patented device needed to be more rigorously tested and obtain approval from drug licensing authorities before it could go into production.

“I would say that could take three to five years,” he said.

Various other methods exist to measure VOCs, including a breath test using color spots, but existing techniques are often expensive, slow and sometimes require the breath to be concentrated or dehumidified first.

By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters)

Provided by ArmMed Media

Email this to a friend Bookmark this! Printable Version

RELATED STORIES:


 Comments [ + Post Your Own

Now you're in the public comment zone. What follows is not Armenian Medical Network's stuff; it comes from other people and we don't vouch for it. A reminder: By using this Web site you agree to accept our Terms of Service. Click here to read the Rules of Engagement.

There are no comments for this entry yet. [ + Comment here + ]




We are pleased to let readers post comments about an article. Please increase the credibility of your post by including your full name and email.

All comments are reviewed by our editors before they are posted on the site. Just keep it clean, kids.

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Please enter the word you see in the image below:


   [advanced search]   
Interactive Quiz:
1. An infant who sits with only minimal support, attempts to attain a toy beyond reach, and rolls over from the supine to the prone position, but does not have a pincer grasp, is at a developmental level of
2 months
4 months
6 months
9 months
1 year



Health Centers

  Head and Neck Cancer

  Esophageal Cancer

  Benign Esophageal Tumors

  Cancer of the larynx

  Salivary Gland Tumors

  Cancer of the Hypopharynx

  Cancer of the Oropharynx

  Cancer of the Oral Cavity

  Cancer of the Nasal Cavity

  Head and Neck Cancer
      (- for profesionals -)


  Gynecologic cancers

  Cervical cancer

  Endometrial Cancer

  Fallopian Tube Cancer

  Ovarian Cancer

  Vaginal cancer

  Vulvar Cancer

  Ureteral & Renal Pelvic
  Cancers


  Uterine Cancer

  Gestational Trophoblastic
  Neoplasia


  Bladder cancer

  Breast cancer

  Colorectal Cancer

  Carcinoma of the Anus

  Anal Cancer Management

  Hodgkin's lymphoma

  Kaposi's sarcoma

  Kidney cancer

  Laryngeal cancer

  Liver cancer

  Lung cancer

  Lung cancer non small cell

  Lung cancer - small cell

  Oral cancer

  Osteosarcoma

  Cancer of the Penis

  Prostate cancer

  Skin cancer

  Stomach cancer

  Testicular cancer

» » »

Health Centers





Diabetes









Health news
  


Health Encyclopedia

Diseases & Conditions

Drugs & Medications

Health Tools

Health Tools



   Health newsletter

  





   Medical Links



   RSS/XML News Feed



   Feedback






Add to Google Reader or Homepage
Cancer: Overview, Causes, Risk Factors, Treatment
Add to My AOL




Breast Cancer - Dispel the Myths, Learn the Facts

hit counter