Abstract

To the Editors: Due to the lack of standardised procedures for exhaled breath condensate (EBC), a noninvasive technique for investigating lung inflammatory mediators [1], the between-laboratory comparison of results is difficult. Moreover, different collecting devices have been reported to influence the EBC content [2, 3]. The analysis of metabolic profiles (“metabolomics”) of EBC using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy discriminates between chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients and healthy subjects (HS) [4]; asthmatic children and HS [5]; and patients with stable cystic fibrosis and unstable cystic fibrosis and HS [6]. This approach has recently been questioned as NMR-based metabolomics of EBC collected using a condenser with reusable parts was reported to be affected by cleaning procedures, generating artificial signals that were not related to the endogenous metabolites of the lungs [7]. In this study we assessed the effects of a different cleaning procedure of a reusable-part condenser on EBC metabolomics; the possible time and carry-over effects when the same device is repeatedly used; technique sensitivity; the ability of NMR spectroscopy of EBC to discriminate between COPD patients and HS; and the potential of NMR spectroscopy in identifying selective EBC metabolites. If the cleaning procedure produces artificial signals in the NMR spectra of EBC, the separation between COPD patients and HS reported previously [4] is certainly surprising, as the residual signals derived from the disinfectant Descogen (Antiseptica chem.-pharm. Produkte GmbH, Pulheim/Brauweiler, Germnay) should have randomly affected both groups. Moreover, using a different reusable-part condenser, Carraro et al . [5] reported that NMR-based metabolomics of EBC differentiates asthmatic children from HS with a success rate of 86% [5]. To verify the influence of the disinfectant on EBC metabolomics, we modified the …

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