Steps toward clinical validation of exhaled volatile organic compound biomarkers for hypoglycemia in persons with type 1 diabetes
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Abstract
Persons with type 1 diabetes (T1D) must track/control their blood glucose (BG) levels to avoid hypoglycemic events (BG < 70 mg/dL), which in the most severe cases can lead to seizures or even death. Canines may lead the way toward innovative testing solutions, as they can be trained to identify hypoglycemia simply and noninvasively by smelling exhaled volatile organic compounds (VOCs). To identify breath-based biomarkers of hypoglycemia, samples were collected during two consecutive summers at a diabetes camp (Cohort 1 and Cohort 2), and VOCs were analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Conserved VOCs between the two cohorts were identified, but individual VOCs alone had low accuracies for detection. Therefore, supervised multivariate statistical analysis was undertaken to identify a biosignature in the training data set (Cohort 1) that could detect hypoglycemia with higher accuracy (sensitivity = 94.8%/specificity = 95.0%). When this model was blindly tested on Cohort 2, hypoglycemia was classified with sensitivity = 90.0%/specificity = 89.9%. Ultimately, this study makes strides toward clinical validation through verifying biomarkers of hypoglycemia in hundreds of breath samples. These results may be translated to design a sensor array that could be integrated into a portable breathalyzer to increase glycemic control in persons with T1D.