Breath temperature test may help diagnose lung cancer

Breath temperature test may help diagnose lung cancer

Doctors may be able to diagnose lung cancer by gauging the temperature of exhaled breath.

A new study presented to the European Respiratory Society (ERS) International Congress analyzed the breath temperature of 82 people who had been referred to a full diagnostic test after an X-ray suggested the presence of lung cancer.

Using a breath thermometer device called an X-Halo, researchers found that the 42 patients found to have lung cancer recorder a higher breath temperature than those without cancer. The study also found temperature increased with the number of years a person smoked, and the stage at which their lung cancer developed, according to a news release.

“Our results suggest that lung cancer causes an increase in the exhumed temperature,” said Giovanna Elisiana Carpagnano, a lead author of the study and professor at University of Foggia, Italy.

“If we are able to refine a test to diagnose lung cancer by measure [of] breath temperature, we will improve the diagnostic process by providing patients with a stress-free and simple test that is also cheaper and less intensive for clinicians,” Carpagnano said.

The researchers were also able to identify a cut-off value in the measurement of temperature to improve accuracy.

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