Effects of high relative humidity and dry purging on VOCs obtained during breath sampling on common sorbent tubes.



Wilkinson, Maxim, White, Iain R, Goodacre, Royston ORCID: 0000-0003-2230-645X, Nijsen, Tamara ME and Fowler, Stephen J
(2020) Effects of high relative humidity and dry purging on VOCs obtained during breath sampling on common sorbent tubes. Journal of Breath Research: volatiles for medical diagnosis, 14 (4). 046006-.

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Abstract

BACKGROUND:Offline breath analysis by GC-MS requires the use of sorbent traps to concentrate and store volatile compounds. The selection of which sorbent to use and best practices for managing water retention are important considerations to allow for reproducible, untargeted, biomarker discovery in water saturated breath samples. OBJECTIVE:To assess three commonly used sorbent materials for their use in breath volatile sampling and determine how the high relative humidity inherent in such samples effects the capture of volatile compounds of interest. METHODS:TenaxGR, TenaxTA/Carbograph1TD and TenaxTA/Carbograph5TD tubes were selected as they are the most commonly used sorbents in the breath sampling literature. The recovery of 29 compounds in a standard mix loaded using high humidity gas was tested for each sorbent and compared to loading in dry gas. Water retention and dry purge rates were determined. Finally, breath samples were sampled simultaneously on to each sorbent type using the ReCIVA and analysed by TD-GC-MS. RESULTS:All three sorbents exhibited acceptable reproducibility when loaded with the standard mix in dry gas. Loading the standard mix in humid gas led to reduced recovery of compounds based on their chemical properties. Dry purging performance for each sorbent material was assessed and was shown to be 1.14, 1.13 and 0.89 mg H2O min-1for TenaxGR, TenaxTA/Carbograph1TD and TenaxTA/Carbograph5TD respectively. A comparison of breath profiles on different sorbents showed differences in background artefacts (sulfur dioxide, cyclopenten-1-one and 3-nonene) and endogenous breath compounds (2-methyl-furan and furfural). CONCLUSIONS:High relative humidity during sampling reduces the ability of sorbent tubes to capture volatile compounds and could impact method detection limits during breath sampling. Sufficient water to impair accurate analysis was retained on all tubes. Minimal differences were observed between sorbent materials when used to sample breath, however, suggestions are provided for sorbent selection for future studies.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: VOCs, Breath sampling, ReCIVA
Depositing User: Symplectic Admin
Date Deposited: 16 Mar 2020 09:21
Last Modified: 18 Jan 2023 23:57
DOI: 10.1088/1752-7163/ab7e17
Open Access URL: https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1752-71...
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URI: https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/3078951