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Researchers develop Odoreader to 'sniff out' prostate cancer in urine

February 16, 2016
European News Medical Devices Rad Oncology Population Health
Professor Chris Probert
Courtesy: University of Liverpool
By: Dana Bentley, Contributing Reporter

A pilot study conducted by researchers from the University of Liverpool shows promising results for a new diagnostic tool that can "smell" prostate and bladder cancer in urine. This new system could potentially transform prostate cancer diagnosis, which commonly consists of the controversial prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test.

Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer among U.S. men, according to the CDC — and yet, accurately diagnosing it continues to be a challenge. Research published in a 2005 issue of JAMA found that there was no PSA cutoff value with both high sensitivity and specificity to prostate cancer.



The standard cutoff value (4.1 ng/mL) yielded sensitivity of 20.5 percent and specificity of 93.8 percent, whereas the lowest cutoff value (1.1 ng/mL) produced sensitivity of 83.4 percent and specificity of 38.9 percent. Depending on the cutoff value used, men screened with the PSA test face either rampant overdiagnosis – and the invasive procedures, overtreatment, and anxiety that accompany it – or a missed cancer diagnosis.

Following the discovery that dogs can smell out urologic cancers with high accuracy, a research team – led by Chris Probert, a gastroenterologist at the University of Liverpool’s Institute of Translational Medicine, and Norman Ratcliffe, a professor at UWE Bristol – developed the Odoreader, a gas chromatography (GC)-sensor system that Ratcliffe likened to an electronic nose.



HCB News reached out to Probert via e-mail to get a better understanding of his team's findings.

When a urine sample is inserted into the Odoreader, it separates the volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in urine into readable patterns, which are then analyzed by computer algorithms also developed by the research team.

The results of a pilot study, published Feb. 11 in the Journal of Breath Research, suggest that the GC-sensor algorithm system is able to successfully identify urologic cancers based on VOC patterns.

Their research consisted of 155 men presenting to urology clinics in Bristol. Of those patients, 58 were diagnosed with prostate cancer, 24 with bladder cancer, and 73 with symptoms such as hematuria, but not presenting cancer. Results varied depending on the statistical model used, but Probert summarized findings thusly: “For bladder cancer, the test was >96 percent sensitive/specific, for prostate cancer about 90 percent.”

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