Title: | "Invasive melanoma in vivo can be distinguished from basal cell carcinoma, benign naevi and healthy skin by canine olfaction: a proof-of-principle study of differential volatile organic compound emission" |
Author(s): | Willis CM; Britton LE; Swindells MA; Jones EM; Kemp AE; Muirhead NL; Gul A; Matin RN; Knutsson L; Ali M; |
Address: | "Department of Dermatology, Amersham Hospital, Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust, Amersham, HP7 0JD, U.K. carolyn.willis@buckshealthcare.nhs.uk. Department of Dermatology, Amersham Hospital, Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust, Amersham, HP7 0JD, U.K. Search Dogs UK, 9 Church Road, Thornton-Cleveleys, Lancashire, FY5 2TX, U.K. Department of Statistical Science, University College London, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT, U.K. Department of Dermatology, Churchill Hospital, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Oxford, OX3 7LE, U.K. Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Linkoping University, 581 83, Linkoping, Sweden" |
ISSN/ISBN: | 1365-2133 (Electronic) 0007-0963 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "BACKGROUND: Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are continuously released by the body during normal metabolic processes, but their profiles change in the presence of cancer. Robust evidence that invasive melanoma in vivo emits a characteristic VOC signature is lacking. OBJECTIVES: To conduct a canine olfactory, proof-of-principle study to investigate whether VOCs from invasive melanoma are distinguishable from those of basal cell carcinoma (BCC), benign naevi and healthy skin in vivo. METHODS: After a 13-month training period, the dog's ability to discriminate melanoma was evaluated in 20 double-blind tests, each requiring selection of one melanoma sample from nine controls (three each of BCC, naevi and healthy skin; all samples new to the dog). RESULTS: The dog correctly selected the melanoma sample on nine (45%) occasions (95% confidence interval 0.23-0.68) vs. 10% expected by chance alone. A one-sided exact binomial test gave a P-value of < 0.01, supporting the hypothesis that samples were not chosen at random but that some degree of VOC signal from the melanoma samples significantly increased the probability of their detection. Use of a discrete-choice model confirmed melanoma as the most influential of the recorded medical/personal covariates in determining the dog's choice of sample. Accuracy rates based on familiar samples during training were not a reliable indicator of the dog's ability to distinguish melanoma, when confronted with new, unknown samples. CONCLUSIONS: Invasive melanoma in vivo releases odorous VOCs distinct from those of BCC, benign naevi and healthy skin, adding to the evidence that the volatile metabolome of melanoma contains diagnostically useful biomarkers" |
Keywords: | "Adult Aged Animals Biomarkers, Tumor/analysis Carcinoma in Situ/*diagnosis Case-Control Studies Dogs Double-Blind Method Female Humans Male Melanoma/*diagnosis Middle Aged Neoplasm Invasiveness Nevus, Pigmented/*diagnosis Skin Neoplasms/*diagnosis *Smell;" |
Notes: | "MedlineWillis, C M Britton, L E Swindells, M A Jones, E M Kemp, A E Muirhead, N L Gul, A Matin, R N Knutsson, L Ali, M eng Evaluation Study England 2016/10/30 Br J Dermatol. 2016 Nov; 175(5):1020-1029. doi: 10.1111/bjd.14887. Epub 2016 Sep 11" |