Skip to main content

Olfactory detection of human bladder cancer by dogs: proof of principle study.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Willis, CM; Church, SM; Guest, CM; Cook, WA; McCarthy, N; Bransbury, AJ; Church, MR; Church, JC
Published in: BMJ (Clinical research ed.)
September 2004

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether dogs can be trained to identify people with bladder cancer on the basis of urine odour more successfully than would be expected by chance alone. DESIGN: Experimental, "proof of principle" study in which six dogs were trained to discriminate between urine from patients with bladder cancer and urine from diseased and healthy controls and then evaluated in tests requiring the selection of one bladder cancer urine sample from six controls. PARTICIPANTS: 36 male and female patients (age range 48-90 years) presenting with new or recurrent transitional cell carcinoma of the bladder (27 samples used for training; 9 used for formal testing); 108 male and female controls (diseased and healthy, age range 18-85 years--54 samples used in training; 54 used for testing). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Mean proportion of successes per dog achieved during evaluation, compared with an expected value of 1 in 7 (14%). RESULTS: Taken as a group, the dogs correctly selected urine from patients with bladder cancer on 22 out of 54 occasions. This gave a mean success rate of 41% (95% confidence intervals 23% to 58% under assumptions of normality, 26% to 52% using bootstrap methods), compared with 14% expected by chance alone. Multivariate analysis suggested that the dogs' capacity to recognise a characteristic bladder cancer odour was independent of other chemical aspects of the urine detectable by urinalysis. CONCLUSIONS: Dogs can be trained to distinguish patients with bladder cancer on the basis of urine odour more successfully than would be expected by chance alone. This suggests that tumour related volatile compounds are present in urine, imparting a characteristic odour signature distinct from those associated with secondary effects of the tumour, such as bleeding, inflammation, and infection.

Duke Scholars

Published In

BMJ (Clinical research ed.)

ISSN

1468-5833

Publication Date

September 2004

Volume

329

Issue

7468

Start / End Page

712

Location

england

Related Subject Headings

  • General & Internal Medicine
  • 1117 Public Health and Health Services
  • 1103 Clinical Sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Willis, C. M., Church, S. M., Guest, C. M., Cook, W. A., McCarthy, N., Bransbury, A. J., … Church, J. C. (2004). Olfactory detection of human bladder cancer by dogs: proof of principle study. BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.), 329(7468), 712.
Willis, C. M., S. M. Church, C. M. Guest, W. A. Cook, N. McCarthy, A. J. Bransbury, M. R. Church, and J. C. Church. “Olfactory detection of human bladder cancer by dogs: proof of principle study.BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.) 329, no. 7468 (September 2004): 712.
Willis CM, Church SM, Guest CM, Cook WA, McCarthy N, Bransbury AJ, et al. Olfactory detection of human bladder cancer by dogs: proof of principle study. BMJ (Clinical research ed). 2004 Sep;329(7468):712.
Willis, C. M., et al. “Olfactory detection of human bladder cancer by dogs: proof of principle study.BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.), vol. 329, no. 7468, Sept. 2004, p. 712.
Willis CM, Church SM, Guest CM, Cook WA, McCarthy N, Bransbury AJ, Church MR, Church JC. Olfactory detection of human bladder cancer by dogs: proof of principle study. BMJ (Clinical research ed). 2004 Sep;329(7468):712.

Published In

BMJ (Clinical research ed.)

ISSN

1468-5833

Publication Date

September 2004

Volume

329

Issue

7468

Start / End Page

712

Location

england

Related Subject Headings

  • General & Internal Medicine
  • 1117 Public Health and Health Services
  • 1103 Clinical Sciences