1 research outputs found
Ultrasensitive Silicon Nanowire for Real-World Gas Sensing: Noninvasive Diagnosis of Cancer from Breath Volatolome
We
report on an ultrasensitive, molecularly modified silicon nanowire
field effect transistor that brings together the lock-and-key and
cross-reactive sensing worlds for the diagnosis of (gastric) cancer
from exhaled volatolome. The sensor is able to selectively detect
volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that are linked with gastric cancer
conditions in exhaled breath and to discriminate them from environmental
VOCs that exist in exhaled breath samples but do not relate to the
gastric cancer per se. Using breath samples collected from actual
patients with gastric cancer and from volunteers who do not have cancer,
blind analysis validated the ability of the reported sensor to discriminate
between gastric cancer and control conditions with >85% accuracy,
irrespective of important confounding factors such as tobacco consumption
and gender. The reported sensing approach paves the way to use the
power of silicon nanowires for simple, inexpensive, portable, and
noninvasive diagnosis of cancer and other disease conditions