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 Appeared in Latimes.
By Jane E. Allen, Times Staff Writer
Just as the human nose interprets a whiff of smoke as a warning of fire,
electronic noses can detect the unique "scent signatures" of diseases,
from bacterial infections to lung cancer.
Consisting of arrays of chemical sensors, these high-tech noses
distinguish the breath, urine and blood of the sick from those of the
healthy. Most devices are still in the experimental stages, with some
being tested on patients with suspected pneumonia and other lung diseases,
sinus infections, diabetes and cancer. The technology could screen and
diagnose diseases and monitor any recurrence right in the doctor's office
or at the patient's bedside.
"What you're seeing is the emergence of the technology to be a diagnostic
tool," said Steve Sunshine, chief executive of Cyrano Sciences in
Pasadena, which makes an electronic nose undergoing tests at several
medical centers.
The practice of diagnosing illness through breath smells dates at least to
Roman times, when doctors called the musky breath of kidney failure
patients fetor hepaticus. Doctors today liken the distinctive breath of
diabetics with dangerously high blood sugar to the scent of a popular
brand of chewing gum.
In the last few decades, scientists worldwide have been developing ways to
detect the chemical signatures of food spoilage, pollution and biological
attacks, and several teams have been zeroing in on medical applications.
Because diseases create distinct changes in the gases we exhale and in the
gases emitted by bacteria infecting our blood and urine, electronic noses
can be programmed to sense their chemical signatures.
So far, only one electronic nose has been approved in this country for
commercial use. In November 2001, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
said Osmetech of Crewe, England, could market the Osmetech Microbial
Analyser for detecting the urinary tract infections that plague millions
of Americans each year. The device, based on technology developed at the
University of Manchester, analyzes gases from bacteria in urine within
hours; bacterial cultures take days.
In January of this year, Osmetech announced that the device had also been
approved for diagnosis of bacterial vaginosis. Using vaginal fluids, it
distinguishes bacterial vaginosis, an infection linked to miscarriage and
premature delivery, from other common vaginal infections.
A team of Caltech researchers was among pioneers of electronic noses. Its
device uses chemical sensors made of special polymers, which change
electrical resistance when they come into contact with gases. Computers
identify the gases by the patterns of electrical changes. The team has
formed Cyrano Sciences Inc., which pairs chemical sensing and
interpretation in an $8,000 device dubbed Cyranose, named after Edmond
Rostand's "Cyrano de Bergerac," the 1897 play about a character with an
enormous nose. Sunshine said his company is about a year from seeking FDA
approval to market its device for medical purposes.
On Sunday, researchers from the Cleveland Clinic reported at the American
Thoracic Society meeting in Seattle that the Cyranose had differentiated
the breath of 14 lung cancer patients from that of 20 healthy people and
25 patients with other lung ailments. (Their presentation followed a May
10 report in New Scientist magazine that an electronic nose developed at
the University of Rome accurately picked out 35 cases of lung cancer from
among a group of 60 hospital patients and was easier on patients than
bronchoscopy, which involves inserting a lighted tube into the lungs).
Electronic noses have also shown great promise in screening for pneumonia.
Last November, researchers at the University of Pennsylvania reported that
Cyranose accurately and quickly detected pneumonia cases when used on 415
critical-care patients on ventilators. The device speeds treatment by
distinguishing quickly between viral or bacterial pneumonia.
"It will save money by preventing unnecessary prescription of antibiotics
and by catching the disease earlier in its course," said lead author Dr.
C. William Hanson III, a Penn anesthesia professor who said he foresees
using the device more widely in a year or two. He said Cyranose could
reduce unnecessary antibiotic use that contributes to resistance.
In other studies, Dr. Erica Thaler, an ear, nose and throat specialist at
Penn, has used Cyranose to pinpoint which cases of sinusitis require
antibiotics. She also has found that the device can distinguish between
drainage of normal nasal fluids and the dangerous leakage of spinal fluid,
which requires immediate attention.

May 19, 2003.
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