EBioMedicine (Jun 2023)

Breath testing for SARS-CoV-2 infectionResearch in context

  • Renelle Myers,
  • Dorota M. Ruszkiewicz,
  • Austin Meister,
  • Crista Bartolomeu,
  • Sukhinder Atkar-Khattra,
  • C.L. Paul Thomas,
  • Stephen Lam

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 92
p. 104584

Abstract

Read online

Summary: Background: From a public health perspective, the identification of individuals with mild respiratory symptoms due to SARS-CoV-2 infection is important to contain the spread of the disease. The objective of this study was to identify volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in exhaled breath common to infection with different variants of the SARS-CoV-2 virus to inform the development of a point-of-care breath test to detect infected individuals with mild symptoms. Methods: A prospective, real-world, observational study was conducted on mildly symptomatic out-patients presenting to community test-sites for RT-qPCR SARS-CoV-2 testing when the Alpha, Beta, and Delta variants were driving the COVID-19 pandemic. VOCs in exhaled breath were compared between PCR-positive and negative individuals using TD-GC-ToF-MS. Candidate VOCs were tested in an independent set of samples collected during the Omicron phase of the pandemic. Findings: Fifty breath samples from symptomatic RT-qPCR positive and 58 breath samples from test-negative, but symptomatic participants were compared. Of the 50 RT-qPCR-positive participants, 22 had breath sampling repeated 8–12 weeks later. PCA-X model yielded 12 distinct VOCs that discriminated SARS-CoV-2 active infection compared to recovery/convalescence period, with an area under the receiver operator characteristic curve (AUROC), of 0.862 (0.747–0.977), sensitivity, and specificity of 82% and 86%, respectively. PCA-X model from 50 RT-qPCR positive and 58 negative symptomatic participants, yielded 11 VOCs, with AUROC of 0.72 (0.604–0.803) and sensitivity of 72%, specificity 65.5%. The 11 VOCs were validated in a separate group of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron positive patients’ vs healthy controls demonstrating an AUROC of 0.96 (95% CI 0.827–0.993) with sensitivity of 80% specificity of 90%. Interpretation: Exhaled breath analysis is a promising non-invasive, point-of-care method to detect mild COVID-19 infection. Funding: Funding for this study was a competitive grant awarded from the Vancouver Coastal Research Institute as well as funding from the BC Cancer Foundation.

Keywords