HOspital Versus Primary Care Breath Test Environment (HOPE) Study
- Conditions
- Breath Test
- Interventions
- Diagnostic Test: Breath test
- Registration Number
- NCT06611293
- Lead Sponsor
- Imperial College London
- Brief Summary
Through the HOPE study, the intention would be to determine whether exhaled breath volatile organic compound (VOC) profiles in Primary care differ from Secondary care. The intention would also be to assess intra-subject variability of participants. This would allow us to determine if the results of breath samples are reproducible regardless of whether they are performed in a Primary or Secondary care environment. This would support the clinical translation of breath research outcomes from studies performed in Secondary care, despite the breath test being intended for use in Primary care.
The chief investigator of the HOPE study is Professor George Hanna (Head of Department of Surgery and Cancer, and Professor of Surgical Sciences at Imperial College London).
- Detailed Description
A breath test is a non-invasive investigation. The use of a breath test as a triage tool - for cancer or other diseases - in symptomatic patients could identify high-risk patients who should be referred for investigations at an earlier stage. This would increase the proportion of appropriate referrals from Primary care and improve adherence to National Institute for Clinical Health and Excellence (NICE) guidance. If a General Practitioner (GP) is presented with a patient with symptoms that do not prompt referral under NICE guidelines, he/she would no longer need to watch-and-wait to see if their symptoms worsen, but could instead offer a breath test immediately. Breath samples would be collected and sent to a regional laboratory for analysis. A positive result would warrant immediate referral for further specialised investigations, whilst a negative test would permit the GP to reassure the patient and offer re-testing if symptoms persist.
The MAGIC (Methodological Approaches towards a GastroIntestinal Cancer test) study was performed to assess whether breath testing is feasible in Primary care. In this study, 1002 patients took part in the breath test in Primary care. Ninety-nine percent of patients found the breath test very easy or easy to perform, and it was demonstrated that breath testing is feasible in Primary care.
However, the potential for an individual's exhaled breath VOC profile to change when measured across Primary and Secondary care sites has not yet been investigated.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 80
Participants will be:
- Aged ≥ 18 years old
- Willing and able to provide informed consent to take part in study.
Pregnant women will be excluded from this study. With the exception of pregnant women, there are no additional strict exclusion criteria as individuals will act as their own control.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Volunteers taking part in study Breath test -
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method The variation in exhaled breath VOC profile in the participants in Primary versus Secondary Care setting. 2 years An exploratory analysis will be performed to identify and exclude contaminated samples. Linear mixed models will be fitted for each compound's measurements to estimate components of variation (between individuals, occasions and repeat samples), and confirm that there is no effect of ordering (hospital-GP vs GP-hospital). Repeatability of each day-location combination will be summarised as the intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) and the coefficient of variation (CV).
The observed differences will be compared with the clinically acceptable limits for each VOC to identify the proportion of GP-hospital differences that fall within these limits. For each VOC, the ICC, CV and the limits of agreement with 95% confidence interval will be reported, along with how they compare with the clinically acceptable differences.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method The intra-subject variability in exhaled breath VOCs when breath is sampled 15 minutes apart on different days. 2 years Please see \"Description\" for \"Primary Outcome Measure\".
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Imperial College London
🇬🇧London, United Kingdom