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There is increasing interest in the development of noninvasive diagnostic methods for early breast cancer detection to
improve the survival rate and minimize the pain of diagnosis. Common methods for diagnosis and surveillance include
mammography, histopathology and blood tests. The major drawbacks of these methods involved high rate of false reports,
time consuming and poor specificity. Identification of characteristic compounds by using high resolution mass spectrometer
may provide a powerful approach for diagnosis of breast cancer. Here, a new noninvasive method was developed for fast
screening breast disease. The hormones, which were collected by scrubbing the surfaces of armpit and nipple with alcohol
swabs, were analyzed by Orbitrap mass spectrometry. The obtained mass spectra were subsequently treated statistically to
identify discriminating hormones between normal vs. breast disease (breast lesions and breast cancer) patients. We found that
the ratios of some hormones including progesterone to testosterone and estrogens to testosterone changed significantly among
different breast diseases. The changes in some typical hormone ratios which were produced by the glands of the armpit and
nipple will reflect the health status of breast and relate to the female breast disease. This method offers considerable potential
as a noninvasive strategy to screen early breast cancer.