| Literature DB >> 24958327 |
Bronte A Holt1, Shyam Varadarajulu, Shantel Hébert-Magee.
Abstract
Endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration is a multistep procedure that involves proper clinical indication, correct selection of needles, adapting evidence-based techniques such as the fanning maneuver and not routinely using suction or the stylet for tissue sampling, and establishing reliable cytopathology support. Integrating cytopathology in the training curriculum and developing a more flexible platform of needles and echoendoscopes are likely to further advance the field of endosonography. This review aims to summarize the technical issues that are key to performing high-quality endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24958327 PMCID: PMC4115182 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-014-0129-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Comparison of different needles for EUS-FNA of solid mass lesions: randomized trials and meta-analyses
| References | Number of patients | Lesion type | Needle size | Diagnostic accuracy/pooled sensitivity in meta-analysis | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Camellini et al./RT [ | 127 | All lesions | 22 vs. 25G | 77.8% vs. 78.1%, | 25G needle better for uncinate masses and 22G needle better for subepithelial masses |
| Fabbri et al./RT [ | 50 | Pancreatic masses | 22 vs. 25G | 86% vs. 94%, | Trend toward better yield with 25G needle |
| Siddiqui et al./RT [ | 131 | All lesions | 22 vs. 25G | 87.5% vs. 95.5%, | NA |
| Song et al./RT [ | 117 | Pancreatic/peripancreatic masses | 22 vs. 19G | 78.9% vs. 94.5%, | Technical success for FNA of pancreatic head masses was significantly less with the 19G needle. 19G needle yielded significantly better cellular material |
| Ramesh et al./RT [ | 72 | Pancreatic masses | 19 vs. 25G | 88.9% vs. 94.4%, | 19G needle yielded significantly more core biopsy tissue but specimens were bloodier |
| Vilmann et al./RT [ | 135 | Mixed lesions | 22 vs. 25G | 89% vs. 90%, | 25G needle more difficult to visualize |
| Lee et al./RT [ | 188 | Pancreatic masses | 22 vs. 25G | 89.4% vs. 88.3%, | 25G needle had lower complication rate |
| Madhoun et al./meta-analysis [ | 1,292 | Pancreatic masses | 22 vs. 25G | 85% (95% CI: 82–88%) vs. 93% (95% CI: 91–96%), | NA |
| Affolter et al./meta-analysis [ | 1,452 | Pancreatic/peripancreatic masses | 19 vs. 22 vs. 25G |
| 25G needle had higher diagnostic adequacy compared to 22G needle. Sample size for 19G needle too small for analysis |
EUS-FNA endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided fine needle aspiration, NA not applicable, NS not significant, RT randomized trial
Fig. 1EUS-FNA cytology preparation and assessment. a Core-like material from a 19G needle expressed onto a slide shows a tan-pink (arrow) section of tissue distinctly different from the hemorrhagic tissue. b A portion of the tan-pink tissue is smeared and the granular tissue fragments are easily discernible. c ROSE shows a pleomorphic mucin-producing carcinoma. d Multiple nonhemorrhagic tan-pink cores were collected in CytoLyt® (Cytyc Corporation; Boxborough, MA, USA) for cell block. e The cell block showed normal liver (left) and adjacent cholangiocarcinoma (right). Samples such as this are excellent for molecular and genomic studies