MS diagnosis development
Scientists are
reporting the development and successful tests in humans of a sensor array that
can diagnose multiple sclerosis (MS) from exhaled breath.
This might be a fast,
inexpensive and non-invasive test for MS - the most common neurological disease
in young adults. Hossam Haick and colleagues report that doctors now diagnose
MS based on its characteristic symptoms, which include muscle spasms, numbness,
coordination problems and slurred speech.
One common tool for
confirming the diagnosis and making informed decisions on treatment is magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain. Another tool is a lumbar puncture or
"spinal tap" to analyze the fluid that bathes the brain and spinal
cord. But MRI scans are costly, and lumbar punctures are invasive.
To overcome these
obstacles, the researchers have identified volatile organic compounds that can
be associated with MS from exhaled breath. Based on these findings, the
researchers developed a new sensor array that can diagnose MS by analyzing the
determined chemical compounds that appear in the breath of MS patients.
Using the developed
sensors, the researchers carried out a proof-of-concept clinical study on 34 MS
patients and 17 healthy volunteers and found that the developed sensors are
just as accurate as a spinal tap but without the pain or the risk of side
effects.
"The results
presented here open new frontiers in the development of fast, noninvasive and
inexpensive medical diagnosis tools for detection of chronic neurological
diseases," the scientists stated. "The results could serve as a
launching pad for the discrimination between different subphases of stages of
multiple sclerosis as well as for the identification of multiple sclerosis
patients who would respond well to immunotherapy."
A large clinical
study with the reported sensors is underway and will be reported in the future.