PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Team’s biosensor technology may lead to breath test for lung cancer

2025-11-03
(Press-News.org) University of Texas at Dallas researchers have developed biosensor technology that when combined with artificial intelligence (AI) shows promise for detecting lung cancer through breath analysis.

The electrochemical biosensor identifies eight volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that are potential biomarkers for thoracic cancers, which include lung and esophageal cancers. AI then analyzes the biochemical characteristics of the compounds to determine whether they are a match to those linked to various thoracic cancers.

“We built a screening tool that could allow physicians to catch the disease in its early phases, which improves outcomes,” said Dr. Shalini Prasad, professor and department head of bioengineering in the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science. “This technology offers a potentially affordable, quick and noninvasive breath analysis tool for cancer screening.”

The project is a collaboration between UT Dallas bioengineering and computer science researchers and a clinical research team from UT Southwestern Medical Center. The researchers described the technology in the August issue of Sensing and Bio-Sensing Research.

The electrochemical device was tested on breath samples from 67 patients, including 30 with biopsy-confirmed thoracic cancer. The device accurately identified the VOCs in 90% of the confirmed cancer cases.

The inspiration for the device came about during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“There was a lot of interest at that time in noninvasive technologies that could rapidly allow us to screen and isolate the spread of COVID,” said Prasad, corresponding author of the study and a Cecil H. and Ida Green Professor in Systems Biology Science. “The use of breath became very attractive because breath goes through our respiratory system and carries metabolites, which are indicators of disease.”

Changes in metabolites in exhaled breath can occur early in the onset of a disease. This emerging field of breathomics has the potential to allow health care providers to analyze VOCs in exhaled breath to diagnose diseases and monitor health conditions, Prasad said. AI is an important component of the diagnostic capabilities of the UT Dallas team’s device.

“There is a huge amount of data provided by the breath,” Prasad said. “What is important? What is not? All of this information comes from the machine learning algorithm. That’s why the partnership with computer science is critical. How meaningfully you integrate AI into a technology is important.”

Prasad approached Dr. Ovidiu Daescu, professor and department head of computer science, a Jonsson School Chair and a co-author of the study, to fine-tune the machine learning models and validate the approach.

“The breath profiling device and associated machine learning model have great potential for making a difference in cancer detection while improving costs, assuming more cases are tested and validated over time in medical settings,” Daescu said.

The researchers also partnered with Dr. Muhanned Abu-Hijleh, a professor of internal medicine in the division of pulmonary and critical care medicine at UT Southwestern.

“Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the U.S. and worldwide,” said Abu-Hijleh, an interventional pulmonologist who is also the medical director of respiratory therapy and director of the chronic obstructive pulmonary disease clinic and program. “Using minimally invasive technologies like biomarkers and exhaled volatile-organic-compounds analysis can help in the early detection of thoracic malignancies with minimal burden on patients and the health care system, carrying less overall morbidity.”

Prasad said the team will continue working on the device, including seeking further clinical validation.

“Eventually, this technology could be deployable in your primary care provider’s office,” she said. “So just as you go in for an annual physical and give an annual blood draw, you could do a breath test as well. Then the primary care provider could make recommendations to the patient if the indicators are elevated, such as a follow-up referral.”

Other UT Dallas contributors to the paper include first author Dr. Anirban Paul, bioengineering research scientist; Kordel France, computer science doctoral student; and Avi Bhatia, neuroscience senior in the School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

Other collaborators from UT Southwestern include clinical research assistant Ruby Thapa and Dr. Rhoda Annoh Gordon, research programs manager in pulmonary and critical care medicine.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Remote patient monitoring boosts primary care revenue and care capacity

2025-11-03
Remote physiologic monitoring (RPM)—digital tools that track patients’ health data between visits—shows promise for improving chronic disease management and reshaping primary care delivery, according to a new study at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. While prior studies have examined how RPM affects patients who use the technology, this is the first study to quantify the impact of RPM on practices, including its effects on practice revenue, care delivery, and ...

Protein plays unexpected dual role in protecting brain from oxidative stress damage

2025-11-03
New research from Johns Hopkins Medicine shows that the enzyme biliverdin reductase A (BVRA) plays a direct protective role against oxidative stress in neurons, independent of its role producing the yellow pigment bilirubin. In this study of genetically engineered mice, the scientists say BVRA protected brain cells from oxidative stress, an imbalance between oxidants and antioxidants that protect cells, by modulating another key protein, NRF2, which regulates the levels of protective proteins and antioxidants in cells. Oxidative stress is a hallmark of neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease.   A report describing the research, funded by the ...

Fermentation waste used to make natural fabric

2025-11-03
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — A fermentation byproduct might help to solve two major global challenges: world hunger and the environmental impact of fast fashion. The leftover yeast from brewing beer, wine or even to make some pharmaceuticals can be repurposed to produce high-performance fibers stronger than natural fibers with significantly less environmental impact, according to a new study led by researchers at Penn State and published today (Nov 3) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.  The yeast biomass — ...

When speaking out feels risky

2025-11-03
In an era when social media blurs the line between public and private speech, how do people decide whether to speak their minds or stay silent? A new study from researchers at Arizona State University and the University of Michigan, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, or PNAS, offers a groundbreaking look at the strategic trade-offs individuals make when facing the threat of punishment for dissent. The work, co-authored by Professor Stephanie Forrest and Assistant Professor Joshua J. Daymude in the School of Computing and Augmented Intelligence, part of the ...

Scientists recreate cosmic “fireballs” to probe mystery of missing gamma rays

2025-11-03
An international team of scientists, led by the University of Oxford, has achieved a world-first by creating plasma "fireballs" using the Super Proton Synchrotron accelerator at CERN, Geneva, to study the stability of plasma jets emanating from blazars. The results, published today (3 November) in PNAS, could shed new light on a long-standing mystery about the Universe’s hidden magnetic fields and missing gamma rays. Blazars are active galaxies powered by supermassive black holes that launch narrow, near-light-speed ...

Turning on an immune pathway in tumors could lead to their destruction

2025-11-03
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- By stimulating cancer cells to produce a molecule that activates a signaling pathway in nearby immune cells, MIT researchers have found a way to force tumors to trigger their own destruction. Activating this signaling pathway, known as the cGAS-STING pathway, worked even better when combined with existing immunotherapy drugs known as checkpoint blockade inhibitors, in a study of mice. That dual treatment was successfully able to control tumor growth. The researchers turned on the cGAS-STING pathway in immune cells using messenger RNA delivered to cancer cells. This approach may avoid the side effects of delivering large doses of a STING activator, and takes ...

Tiles, leaves and cotton strips for measuring river health

2025-11-03
Rivers perform a vital role in environmental balance. Keeping them in good condition depends not only on water quality, but also on the life they host and the processes that take place within them: plant respiration, decomposition of organic matter, and transformation of nutrients, among others. “The good condition of a river means taking into account both the organisms that inhabit it and the way it functions,” explained Luz Boyero, an Ikerbasque Research Professor at the EHU. Human activity may alter this natural dynamic, so tools need to be available to enable its effects to be detected in a timely manner. With the aim of standardising methods for assessing river ...

Exploring the relationship between sleep and diet

2025-11-03
Sleep patterns and eating habits can influence each other, but the link between these behaviors remains unclear. In a new JNeurosci paper, researchers led by William Ja, from the Herbert Wertheim UF Scripps Institute for Biomedical Innovation and Technology, used fruit flies (Drosophila) to explore how different kinds of sleep deprivation influence subsequent sleeping and feeding behavior.  The researchers tested different sleep loss conditions and discovered that when fruit flies are sleep deprived to the point of energy loss, they compensate by feeding and sleeping more to restore their energy. When ...

Sex differences in gambling rats

2025-11-03
Some people with psychiatric conditions, including addiction and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, struggle to control their urges or make decisions under uncertainty. In a collaboration between the University of Cambridge and the University of British Columbia, Tristan Hynes and colleagues used rats to explore the role of a specific reward-related neuron population in shaping impulsivity and risky decision-making during a gambling task.  As reported in their JNeurosci paper, the researchers manipulated the neuron population’s activity as rats chose between ...

From charged polymers to life-saving innovations

2025-11-03
Whether natural or synthetic, polymers — large molecules made up of repeating units called monomers — exhibit complex structures and properties that make them useful in a wide range of applications. In their soft, nearly liquid biogel form, polymers viewed through an optical microscope resemble a bowl of tangled soft noodles. In that state, they tend to coacervate, or combine, with other polymers — when those polymers carry opposite electrostatic charges.    UC Santa Barbara ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

What your sweat can reveal about your health

Groundbreaking research compares prompt styles and LLMs for structured data generation - Unveiling key trade-offs for real-world AI applications

Beat the bugs, enjoy the beats

Genome advancement puts better Wagyu marbling on the menu

Developing a new electric vehicle sound

Elephant seals recognize their rivals from years prior

Fossils reveal anacondas have been giants for over 12 million years

Sylvester researchers lead major treatment overhauls for acute myeloid leukemia

New global guidelines streamline environmental microbiome research

Small changes make some AI systems more brain-like than others

Asia PGI and partners unveil preview of PathGen: New AI-powered outbreak intelligence tool

Groundbreaking technique unlocks secrets of bacterial shape-shifting

Studies reevaluate reverse weathering process, shifts understanding of global climate

What time is it on Mars? NIST physicists have the answer

Findings suggest red planet was warmer, wetter millions of years ago

Renewable lignin waste transformed into powerful catalyst for clean hydrogen production

UTEP researcher finds potential new treatment for aggressive ovarian cancer

Everyday repellent, global pollutant

Iron fortified hemp biochar helps keep “forever chemicals” out of radishes and the food chain

Corticosteroid use does not appear to increase infectious complications in non-COVID-19 pneumonia

All life copies DNA unambiguously into proteins. Archaea may be the exception.

A new possibility for life: Study suggests ancient skies rained down ingredients

Coral reefs have stabilized Earth’s carbon cycle for the past 250 million years

Francisco José Sánchez-Sesma selected as 2026 Joyner Lecturer

In recognition of World AIDS Day 2025, Gregory Folkers and Anthony Fauci reflect on progress made in antiretroviral treatments and prevention of HIV/AIDS, highlighting promising therapeutic developmen

Treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS: Unfinished business

Drug that costs as little as 50 cents per day could save hospitals thousands, McMaster study finds

Health risks of air pollution from stubble burning poorly understood in various parts of Punjab, India

How fast you can walk before hip surgery may determine how well you recover

Roadmap for reducing, reusing, and recycling in space

[Press-News.org] Team’s biosensor technology may lead to breath test for lung cancer