TY - JOUR
T1 - The variability of volatile organic compounds in the indoor air of clinical environments
AU - Behalf Of The Ember Consortium, On
AU - Salman, Dahlia
AU - Ibrahim, Wadah
AU - Kanabar, Amisha
AU - Joyce, Abigail
AU - Zhao, Bo
AU - Singapuri, Amisha
AU - Wilde, Michael
AU - Cordell, Rebecca L.
AU - Mcnally, Teresa
AU - Ruszkiewicz, Dorota
AU - Hadjithekli, Andria
AU - Free, Robert
AU - Greening, Neil
AU - Gaillard, Erol A.
AU - Beardsmore, Caroline
AU - Monks, Paul
AU - Brightling, Chris
AU - Siddiqui, Salman
AU - Thomas, C. L.Paul
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd.
PY - 2022/1
Y1 - 2022/1
N2 - The development of clinical breath-analysis is confounded by the variability of background volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Reliable interpretation of clinical breath-analysis at individual, and cohort levels requires characterisation of clinical-VOC levels and exposures. Active-sampling with thermal-desorption/gas chromatography-mass spectrometry recorded and evaluated VOC concentrations in 245 samples of indoor air from three sites in a large National Health Service (NHS) provider trust in the UK over 27 months. Data deconvolution, alignment and clustering isolated 7344 features attributable to VOC and described the variability (composition and concentration) of respirable clinical VOC. 328 VOC were observed in more than 5% of the samples and 68 VOC appeared in more than 30% of samples. Common VOC were associated with exogenous and endogenous sources and 17 VOC were identified as seasonal differentiators. The presence of metabolites from the anaesthetic sevoflurane, and putative-disease biomarkers in room air, indicated that exhaled VOC were a source of background-pollution in clinical breath-testing activity. With the exception of solvents, and waxes associated with personal protective equipment (PPE), exhaled VOC concentrations above 3 µg m-3 are unlikely to arise from room air contamination, and in the absence of extensive survey-data, this level could be applied as a threshold for inclusion in studies, removing a potential environmental confounding-factor in developing breath-based diagnostics.
AB - The development of clinical breath-analysis is confounded by the variability of background volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Reliable interpretation of clinical breath-analysis at individual, and cohort levels requires characterisation of clinical-VOC levels and exposures. Active-sampling with thermal-desorption/gas chromatography-mass spectrometry recorded and evaluated VOC concentrations in 245 samples of indoor air from three sites in a large National Health Service (NHS) provider trust in the UK over 27 months. Data deconvolution, alignment and clustering isolated 7344 features attributable to VOC and described the variability (composition and concentration) of respirable clinical VOC. 328 VOC were observed in more than 5% of the samples and 68 VOC appeared in more than 30% of samples. Common VOC were associated with exogenous and endogenous sources and 17 VOC were identified as seasonal differentiators. The presence of metabolites from the anaesthetic sevoflurane, and putative-disease biomarkers in room air, indicated that exhaled VOC were a source of background-pollution in clinical breath-testing activity. With the exception of solvents, and waxes associated with personal protective equipment (PPE), exhaled VOC concentrations above 3 µg m-3 are unlikely to arise from room air contamination, and in the absence of extensive survey-data, this level could be applied as a threshold for inclusion in studies, removing a potential environmental confounding-factor in developing breath-based diagnostics.
KW - breath analysis
KW - environmental VOC
KW - indoor air pollution
KW - TD-GC-MS
KW - thermal desorption-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry
KW - volatile organic compounds
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85122489981
U2 - 10.1088/1752-7163/ac3565
DO - 10.1088/1752-7163/ac3565
M3 - Article
C2 - 34724656
AN - SCOPUS:85122489981
SN - 1752-7155
VL - 16
JO - Journal of Breath Research
JF - Journal of Breath Research
IS - 1
M1 - 016005
ER -