- 
I have a tendency to assume the worst, 
- 
and once in a while,
 this habit plays tricks on me.
 
- 
For example, if I feel
 unexpected pain in my body
 
- 
that I have not experienced before
 and that I cannot attribute,
 
- 
then all of a sudden, my mind
 might turn a tense back into heart disease
 
- 
or calf muscle pain
 into deep vein thrombosis.
 
- 
But so far, I haven't been diagnosed
 with any deadly or incurable disease.
 
- 
Sometimes things just hurt
 for no clear reason.
 
- 
But not everyone is as lucky as me. 
- 
Every year, more than
 50 million people die worldwide.
 
- 
Especially in high-income
 economies like ours,
 
- 
a large fraction of deaths is caused
 by slowly progressing diseases:
 
- 
heart disease, chronic lung disease,
 cancer, Alzheimer's, diabetes,
 
- 
just to name a few. 
- 
Now, humanity has made tremendous progress
 in diagnosing and treating many of these.
 
- 
But we are at a stage
 where further advancement in health
 
- 
cannot be achieved only
 by developing new treatments.
 
- 
This becomes evident
 when we look at one aspect
 
- 
that many of these
 diseases have in common:
 
- 
the probability for successful treatment 
- 
strongly depends on
 when treatment is started.
 
- 
But a disease is typically only detected
 once symptoms occur.
 
- 
The problem here is that, in fact,
 many disease can remain asymptomatic,
 
- 
hence undetected,
 for a long period of time.
 
- 
Because of this, there is
 a persisting need for new ways
 
- 
of detecting disease at early stage, 
- 
way before any symptoms occur. 
- 
In health care, this is called screening. 
- 
And as defined by
 the World Health Organization,
 
- 
screening is "the presumptive
 identification of unrecognized disease
 
- 
in an apparently healthy [person], 
- 
by means of tests ... that can be applied
 rapidly and easily ..."
 
- 
That's a long definition,
 so let me repeat it:
 
- 
identification of unrecognized disease 
- 
in an apparently healthy person 
- 
by means of tests that can be applied
 both rapidly and easily.
 
- 
And I want to put special emphasis
 on the words "rapidly" and "easily,"
 
- 
because many of the existing
 screening methods
 
- 
are exactly the opposite. 
- 
And those of you
 who have undergone colonoscopy
 
- 
as part of a screening program
 for colorectal cancer
 
- 
will know what I mean. 
- 
Obviously, there's a variety
 of medical tools available
 
- 
to perform screening tests. 
- 
This ranges from imaging techniques
 such as radiography
 
- 
or magnetic resonance imaging 
- 
to the analysis of blood or tissue. 
- 
We have all had such tests. 
- 
But there's one medium
 that for long has been overlooked,
 
- 
a medium that is easily accessible, 
- 
basically nondepletable, 
- 
and it holds tremendous promise
 for medical analysis.
 
- 
And that is our breath. 
- 
Human breath is essentially
 composed of five components:
 
- 
nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide,
 water and argon.
 
- 
But besides these five, there are
 hundreds of other components
 
- 
that are present in very low quantity. 
- 
These are called volatile
 organic compounds,
 
- 
and we release hundreds,
 even thousands of them,
 
- 
every time we exhale. 
- 
The analysis of these volatile
 organic compounds in our breath
 
- 
is called breath analysis. 
- 
In fact, I believe that many of you
 have already experienced breath analysis.
 
- 
Imagine: you're driving home
 late at night,
 
- 
when suddenly, there's
 a friendly police officer
 
- 
who asks you kindly but firmly 
- 
to pull over and blow
 into a device like this one.
 
- 
This is an alcohol breath tester 
- 
that is used to measure
 the ethanol concentration in your breath
 
- 
and determine whether driving
 in your condition is a clever idea.
 
- 
Now, I'd say my driving was pretty good, 
- 
but let me check. 
- 
(Beep) 
- 
Zero point zero, so nothing
 to worry about, all fine.
 
- 
(Laughter) 
- 
Now imagine a device like this one, 
- 
that does not only measure
 alcohol levels in your breath,
 
- 
but that detects diseases
 like the ones I've shown you
 
- 
and potentially many more. 
- 
The concept of correlating
 the smell of a person's breath
 
- 
with certain medical conditions 
- 
in fact, dates back to Ancient Greece. 
- 
But only recently, research efforts
 on breath analysis have skyrocketed,
 
- 
and what once was a dream
 is now becoming reality.
 
- 
Let me pull up this list again
 that I showed you earlier.
 
- 
For the majority of diseases listed here, 
- 
there's substantial scientific evidence 
- 
suggesting that the disease
 could be detected by breath analysis.
 
- 
But how does it work, exactly? 
- 
The essential part is a sensor device 
- 
that detects the volatile
 organic compounds in our breath.
 
- 
Simply put: when exposed
 to a breath sample,
 
- 
the sensor outputs a complex signature 
- 
that results from the mixture of volatile
 organic compounds that we exhale.
 
- 
Now, this signature represents
 a fingerprint of your metabolism,
 
- 
your microbiome 
- 
and the biochemical processes
 that occur in your body.
 
- 
If you have a disease, 
- 
your organisms will change 
- 
and so will the composition
 of your exhaled breath.
 
- 
And then the only thing that is left to do
 is to correlate a certain signature
 
- 
with the presence or absence
 of certain medical conditions.
 
- 
The technology promises
 several undeniable benefits.
 
- 
Firstly, the sensor can be miniaturized 
- 
and integrated into small,
 handheld devices
 
- 
like this alcohol breath tester. 
- 
This would allow the test to be used
 in many different settings
 
- 
and even at home, 
- 
so that a visit at the doctor's office 
- 
is not needed each time
 a test shall be performed.
 
- 
Secondly, breath analysis is noninvasive 
- 
and can be as simple as blowing
 into an alcohol breath tester.
 
- 
Such simplicity and ease of use
 would reduce patient burden
 
- 
and provide an incentive
 for broad adoption of the technology.
 
- 
And thirdly, the technology is so flexible 
- 
that the same device could be used 
- 
to detect a broad range
 of medical conditions.
 
- 
Breath analysis could be used to screen
 for multiple diseases at the same time.
 
- 
Nowadays, each disease typically requires
 a different medical tool
 
- 
to perform a screening test. 
- 
But this means you can only find
 what you're looking for.
 
- 
With all of these features,
 breath analysis is predestined
 
- 
to deliver what many traditional
 screening tests are lacking.
 
- 
And most importantly, 
- 
all of these features should
 eventually provide us
 
- 
with a platform for medical analysis 
- 
that can operate at attractively
 low cost per test.
 
- 
On the contrary, existing medical tools 
- 
often lead to rather high cost per test. 
- 
Then, in order to keep costs down, 
- 
the number of tests
 needs to be restricted,
 
- 
and this means a) that the tests
 can only be performed
 
- 
on a narrow part of the population,
 for example, the high-risk population;
 
- 
and b) that the number of tests per person
 needs to be kept at a minimum.
 
- 
But wouldn't it actually be beneficial 
- 
if the test was performed
 on a larger group of people
 
- 
and more often and over a longer period
 of time for each individual?
 
- 
Especially the latter would give access
 to something very valuable
 
- 
that is called longitudinal data. 
- 
Longitudinal data is a data set
 that tracks the same patient
 
- 
over the course of many months or years. 
- 
Nowadays, medical decisions
 are often based on a limited data set,
 
- 
where only a glimpse
 of a patient's medical history
 
- 
is available for decision-making. 
- 
In such a case, 
- 
abnormalities are typically detected 
- 
by comparing a patient's health profile 
- 
to the average health profile
 of a reference population.
 
- 
Longitudinal data would
 open up a new dimension
 
- 
and allow abnormalities to be detected 
- 
based on a patient's own medical history. 
- 
This will pave the way
 for personalized treatment.
 
- 
Sounds pretty great, right? 
- 
Now you will certainly have a question
 that is something like,
 
- 
"If the technology is as great as he says,
 then why aren't they using it today?"
 
- 
And the only answer I can give you is, 
- 
not everything is as easy as it sounds. 
- 
There are technical
 challenges, for example.
 
- 
There's the need for
 extremely reliable sensors
 
- 
that can detect mixtures
 of volatile organic compounds
 
- 
with sufficient reproducibility. 
- 
And another technical challenge is: 
- 
How do you sample a person's breath
 in a very defined manner
 
- 
so that the sampling process itself 
- 
does not alter the result of the analysis? 
- 
And there's the need for data. 
- 
Breath analysis needs
 to be validated in clinical trials,
 
- 
and enough data needs to be collected 
- 
so that individual conditions
 can be measured against baselines.
 
- 
Breath analysis can only succeed 
- 
if a large enough data set
 can be generated
 
- 
and made available for broad use. 
- 
If breath analysis
 holds up to its promises,
 
- 
this is a technology
 that could truly aid us
 
- 
to transform our health care system, 
- 
transform it from a reactive system 
- 
where treatment is triggered
 by symptoms of disease
 
- 
to a proactive system, 
- 
where disease detection,
 diagnosis and treatment
 
- 
can happen at early stage, 
- 
way before any symptoms occur. 
- 
Now this brings me to my last point,
 and it's a fundamental one.
 
- 
What, exactly, is a disease? 
- 
Imagine that breath analysis
 can be commercialized as I describe it,
 
- 
and early detection becomes routine. 
- 
A problem that remains
 is, in fact, a problem
 
- 
that any screening activity has to face, 
- 
because for many diseases, 
- 
it is often impossible to predict
 with sufficient certainty
 
- 
whether the disease
 would ever cause any symptoms
 
- 
or put a person's life at risk. 
- 
This is called overdiagnosis, 
- 
and it leads to a dilemma. 
- 
If a disease is identified, 
- 
you could decide not to treat it, 
- 
because there's a certain probability
 that you would never suffer from it.
 
- 
But how much would you suffer 
- 
just from knowing that you have
 a potentially deadly disease?
 
- 
And wouldn't you actually regret
 that the disease was detected
 
- 
in the first place? 
- 
Your second option
 is to undergo early treatment
 
- 
with the hope for curing it. 
- 
But often, this would not come
 without side effects.
 
- 
To be precise: 
- 
the bigger problem is not overdiagnosis, 
- 
it's overtreatment, 
- 
because not every disease
 has to be treated immediately
 
- 
just because a treatment is available. 
- 
The increasing adoption
 of routine screening
 
- 
will raise the question: 
- 
What do we call a disease
 that can rationalize treatment,
 
- 
and what is just an abnormality
 that should not be a source of concern?
 
- 
My hopes are that routine screening
 using breath analysis
 
- 
can provide enough data and insight 
- 
so that at some point,
 we'll be able to break this dilemma
 
- 
and predict with sufficient certainty 
- 
whether and when to treat at early stage. 
- 
Our breath and the mixture of volatile
 organic compounds that we exhale
 
- 
hold tremendous amounts of information
 on our physiological condition.
 
- 
With what we know today,
 we have only scratched the surface.
 
- 
As we collect more and more data
 and breath profiles across the population,
 
- 
including all varieties of gender,
 age, origin and lifestyle,
 
- 
the power of breath analysis
 should increase,
 
- 
and eventually, breath analysis
 should provide us with a powerful tool
 
- 
not only to proactively detect
 specific diseases,
 
- 
but to predict
 and ultimately prevent them.
 
- 
And this should be enough motivation 
- 
to embrace the opportunities
 and challenges
 
- 
that breath analysis can provide, 
- 
even for people that are not
 part-time hypochondriacs like me.
 
- 
Thank you. 
- 
(Applause)