- Home
- Medical news & Guidelines
- Anesthesiology
- Cardiology and CTVS
- Critical Care
- Dentistry
- Dermatology
- Diabetes and Endocrinology
- ENT
- Gastroenterology
- Medicine
- Nephrology
- Neurology
- Obstretics-Gynaecology
- Oncology
- Ophthalmology
- Orthopaedics
- Pediatrics-Neonatology
- Psychiatry
- Pulmonology
- Radiology
- Surgery
- Urology
- Laboratory Medicine
- Diet
- Nursing
- Paramedical
- Physiotherapy
- Health news
- Fact Check
- Bone Health Fact Check
- Brain Health Fact Check
- Cancer Related Fact Check
- Child Care Fact Check
- Dental and oral health fact check
- Diabetes and metabolic health fact check
- Diet and Nutrition Fact Check
- Eye and ENT Care Fact Check
- Fitness fact check
- Gut health fact check
- Heart health fact check
- Kidney health fact check
- Medical education fact check
- Men's health fact check
- Respiratory fact check
- Skin and hair care fact check
- Vaccine and Immunization fact check
- Women's health fact check
- AYUSH
- State News
- Andaman and Nicobar Islands
- Andhra Pradesh
- Arunachal Pradesh
- Assam
- Bihar
- Chandigarh
- Chattisgarh
- Dadra and Nagar Haveli
- Daman and Diu
- Delhi
- Goa
- Gujarat
- Haryana
- Himachal Pradesh
- Jammu & Kashmir
- Jharkhand
- Karnataka
- Kerala
- Ladakh
- Lakshadweep
- Madhya Pradesh
- Maharashtra
- Manipur
- Meghalaya
- Mizoram
- Nagaland
- Odisha
- Puducherry
- Punjab
- Rajasthan
- Sikkim
- Tamil Nadu
- Telangana
- Tripura
- Uttar Pradesh
- Uttrakhand
- West Bengal
- Medical Education
- Industry
Volatilomic Diagnostics Demonstrate Promise for Inflammatory Oral Disease Detection, finds study

Despite variable validation performance across different disease categories and limited discriminatory ability for early dysbiotic and non-inflammatory conditions, volatilomic predictive models showed strong classification accuracy for inflammatory oral diseases, particularly periodontitis and implant-related conditions. These findings underscore the potential of volatilomic diagnostics as a non-invasive adjunctive tool for disease detection and monitoring. However, current limitations related to sample size, biological variability, and metabolic overlap remain significant challenges, especially in early disease stages. Continued advances in sensor technologies and machine-learning methodologies are expected to improve model robustness, enhance generalizability, and support the translation of this promising diagnostic approach into clinical practice.
Diagnostic limitations contribute to variability in clinical decision-making, highlighting the need for objective diagnostic tools. Biomarker-based approaches enable detection of subclinical pathological changes and may improve diagnostic accuracy. Exhaled breath contains volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that reflect host and microbial metabolic activity and therefore represent a promising non-invasive diagnostic medium. This study evaluated the feasibility of using nanosensor array outputs to classify caries, gingivitis, periodontitis, and peri-implantitis using breath VOC profiles.
A priori power analysis (η²=0.02) yielded 346 participants across five oral phenotypes. Exhaled VOCs were analysed via GC–MS, with a subset assessed using a 40-sensor nanoarray. VOCs were age-adjusted (residual regression), filtered (≥50% presence; 47 compounds), log-transformed, and tested (Kruskal–Wallis, Bonferroni αadj=0.0167). Nanoarray data underwent Principal Component Analysis (PCA) (15 factors; αadj=0.01), Canonical Discriminant Analysis (CDA), and supervised Machine Learning (ML) (80:20 split).
Results: GC–MS identified one significant VOC (RT≈2.81 min) differentiating periodontitis from caries (p=0.006) and gingivitis (p=0.043), while 13 VOCs distinguished implant groups (p<0.05). Nanoarray CDA showed two significant functions (Wilks’ Λ=0.1697, p<0.0001; 87.64% variance). A 10-sensor ML model achieved 69.6% training and 58.8% validation accuracy. Validation sensitivities were polarized (100% periodontitis/healthy implants; 25–50% others), with high specificities (0.714–1.000) and ROC-AUC (0.88–0.97).
Conclusions: Although validation performance across all disease categories remained variable, and discriminatory capacity was limited for early dysbiotic and non-inflammatory conditions, the predictive models demonstrated strong classification accuracy for inflammatory phenotypes, particularly periodontitis and implant-related states. These findings highlight both the promise of volatilomic diagnostics and the current limitations imposed by sample size, biological variability, and metabolic overlap, particularly in early disease stages. Nevertheless, the strong performance observed in inflammatory conditions underscores the potential clinical utility of this platform as a non-invasive adjunct for disease detection and monitoring. Continued advancements in sensor technologies and machine learning methodologies are likely to enhance model robustness and generalizability, facilitating translation into clinical practice.
Reference:
MAISA HAIEK, YOAV BROZA, ADI FARBER, MARIA MIROPOLSKI, HOSSAM HAICK, ERVIN WEISS, YAEL HOURI-HADDAD. Breath-Based Detection of Oral Diseases Using Sensors and Machine Learning, Journal of Dentistry, 2026, 106872, ISSN 0300-5712,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdent.2026.106872.
(https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0300571226005427)
Keywords:
Volatilomic, Diagnostics, Demonstrate, Promise, Inflammatory, Oral Disease, Detection, finds, study, Biomarker, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, volatile organic compound, diagnosis, machine learning, breathomics, caries, gingivitis, periodontitis, peri-implantitis, implant, MAISA HAIEK, YOAV BROZA, ADI FARBER, MARIA MIROPOLSKI, HOSSAM HAICK, ERVIN WEISS, YAEL HOURI-HADDAD
Dr. Shravani Dali has completed her BDS from Pravara institute of medical sciences, loni. Following which she extensively worked in the healthcare sector for 2+ years. She has been actively involved in writing blogs in field of health and wellness. Currently she is pursuing her Masters of public health-health administration from Tata institute of social sciences. She can be contacted at editorial@medicaldialogues.in.

