18 research outputs found

    Transthoracic ultrasound-guided biopsy in the hands of chest physicians – a stepwise approach

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    Background: The evaluation of patients with lung lesions is challenging. The nature of the lesion can be determined by pathological evaluation of biopsies. The pulmonologists will be met by increasing demands with regard to biopsy techniques including ultrasound-guided transthoracic needle biopsy (US-TTNB).Objective: The aim of this paper is to present the pulmonologist to a systematic step-by-step guide for performing US-TTNB and to assess the evidence for this approach. Method/results: Indications, contraindications and a step-by-step guide for the techniques used when performing US-TTNB are presented, and major complications and handling of these are described. Conclusion: US-TTNB performed by pulmonologists is a safe and feasible procedure

    EUS-B-FNA for Diagnosing Liver and Celiac Metastases in Lung Cancer Patients

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    Background: In patients with suspected or proven lung cancer, assessment of regional nodal and distant metastases is key before treatment planning. By introducing the endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS)-guided scope into the esophagus and stomach (EUS-B), liver lesions and celiac nodes can be visualized. To date, the utility of EUS-B in diagnosing liver lesions and retroperitoneal lymph nodes is unknown. Objectives: To assess the feasibility, safety, and diagnostic yield of sampling of liver lesions and retroperitoneal nodes by EUS-B fine-needle aspiration (FNA) in a lung cancer staging setting. Method: Consecutive patients suspected of lung cancer in 2 Danish centers between 1 January 2015 and 31 December 2017 were included retrospectively when a lesion in the liver or a retroperitoneal lymph node was visualized and biopsied with EUS-B-FNA. Results: 23 left liver lobe lesions and 19 retroperitoneal lymph nodes were sampled by EUS-B-FNA. Sensitivity and diagnostic yield of sampled liver lesions were 86 and 83%, respectively. In 19/23 patients, there was a cytopathological diagnosis of malignancy. Sensitivity and diagnostic yield from retroperitoneal lymph node samples were 83 and 63%, respectively. In 10/19 patients, the diagnosis was malignancy. No complications were observed. Conclusion: EUS-B-FNA enables safe sampling of left liver lobe lesions and retroperitoneal lymph nodes. EUS-B should be considered as a minimally invasive technique to provide tissue proof of distant metastases lung cancer patients

    The value of computed tomography in discriminating malignant from non-malignant causes of unresolved unilateral pleural effusions:a systematic review

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    The scientific background in expert-opinion papers for recommending Computed Tomography (CT) in unilateral pleural exudates is based on studies including patients with other findings than unilateral pleural effusions or selected patients undergoing thoracoscopy. Therefore, we performed a systematic review investigating the sensitivity of CT for predicting malignancy in patients with unilateral, non-transudative, pleural effusions. A search strategy was developed with the assistance of a medical information specialist at our university library. We searched PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE and Cochrane Library, ClinicalTrials.gov and articles citing the included studies. No date restrictions were applied (the first included paper was published in 2001 (1)), and only literature in English was included. We used the Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies 2 for bias assessment. We registered the protocol at PROSPERO (CRD42018094830). Five studies were included, two prospective and three retrospective, all performed in Western Europe. No study reported diagnostic values for patients with unilateral, non-transudative pleural effusions only; one study did for unilateral pleural effusions. In the remaining studies, most patients had unilateral effusions and non-transudative effusions. Patients were primarily males and >70 years. All but one study found a high incidence of malignancy, dominated by malignant pleural mesothelioma. All studies were limited by risk of bias and applicability, predominantly regarding study population, pretests and index test. The current evidence supporting the sensitivity of CT for predicting malignancy in unilateral pleural effusions (both non-transudative and all types of effusion) is very low and did not allow meta-analysis. Standardization of patient population and CT protocol may facilitate conclusions of futures studies
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