Authors
Wouter H van Geffen, Kevin Lamote, Adrien Costantini, Lizza EL Hendriks, Najib M Rahman, Torsten G Blum, Jan Van Meerbeeck
Publication date
2019/12/1
Source
Breathe
Volume
15
Issue
4
Pages
e135-e141
Publisher
European Respiratory Society
Description
Lung cancer is very common and the most common cause of cancer death worldwide. Despite recent progress in the systemic treatment of lung cancer (checkpoint inhibitors and tyrosine kinase inhibitors), each year, >1.5 million people die due to this disease. Most lung cancer patients already have advanced disease at the time of diagnosis. Computed tomography screening of high-risk individuals can detect lung cancer at an earlier stage but at a cost of false-positive findings. Biomarkers could lead towards a reduction of these false-positive findings and earlier lung cancer diagnosis, and have the potential to improve outcomes and treatment monitoring. To date, there is a lack of such biomarkers for lung cancer and other thoracic malignancies, although electronic nose (e-nose)-derived biomarkers are of interest.
E-nose techniques using exhaled breath component measurements can detect lung cancer with a …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
WH van Geffen, K Lamote, A Costantini, LEL Hendriks… - Breathe, 2019