DOGS are surprisingly adept at sniffing out lung cancer, results
from a pilot project in Austria published on Wednesday suggested,
potentially offering hope for earlier, life-saving diagnosis.
"Dogs have no problem identifying tumour patients," said Peter
Errhalt, head of the pulmonology department at Krems hospital in
northern Austria, one of the authors of the study.
The test saw
dogs achieve a 70-per cent success rate identifying cancer from 120
breath samples, a result so "encouraging" that a two-year study 10 times
larger will now take place, Errhalt said.
The results echo
anecdotal evidence of odd canine behaviour when around cancer sufferers
and are backed up by the results of similar small studies, including one
by German scientists in 2011.
The ultimate aim is not however to
have canines stationed in hospitals, but for scientists to identify what
scents the dogs are detecting, explained Michael Mueller from the Otto
Wagner Hospital in Vienna, who collaborated on the pilot project.
This in turn could help scientists reproduce in the long term a kind
of "electronic nose" - minus the wagging tail - that could help
diagnose lung cancer in the early stages, thereby dramatically improving
survival rates, Mueller said.
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