| Literature DB >> 25295226 |
Linda Marie Ofiara1, Asma Navasakulpong2, Stephane Beaudoin1, Anne Valerie Gonzalez1.
Abstract
Lung cancer has entered the era of personalized therapy with histologic subclassification and the presence of molecular biomarkers becoming increasingly important in therapeutic algorithms. At the same time, biopsy specimens are becoming increasingly smaller as diagnostic algorithms seek to establish diagnosis and stage with the least invasive techniques. Here, we review techniques used in the diagnosis of lung cancer including bronchoscopy, ultrasound-guided bronchoscopy, transthoracic needle biopsy, and thoracoscopy. In addition to discussing indications and complications, we focus our discussion on diagnostic yields and the feasibility of testing for molecular biomarkers such as epidermal growth factor receptor and anaplastic lymphoma kinase, emphasizing the importance of a sufficient tumor biopsy.Entities:
Keywords: EGFR; diagnosis; diagnostic yield; lung cancer; molecular biomarkers; transthoracic needle aspiration; ultrasound bronchoscopy
Year: 2014 PMID: 25295226 PMCID: PMC4170137 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1(A) Endobronchial tumor visible in an airway. (B) Ultrasound image of a peripheral lung cancer as visualized by radial EBUS-GS. The clear central area is the ultrasound probe in the airway. The surrounding isoechoic shadow represents a tumor. The hyperechoic line surrounding the tumor is an ultrasound phenomenon produced by the sudden change in tissue density from tumor to aerated lung. (C) Mediastinal lymph node station accessibility by EBUS, mediastinoscopy, and EUS. (D) Real-time needle aspiration of a lymph node. The needle (hyperechoic line coming from the top left corner of the screen) is penetrating the lymph node under direct ultrasound visualization.
Yields of various procedures used to diagnose lung cancer.
| Diagnostic modality | Specimen types | Diagnostic yield | Adequacy for biomarker testing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bronchoscopy | Endobronchial biopsy | 70–90% (if lesion visible) | Up to 100% in one series for endobronchial biopsy. Less than 50% in washings |
| Brushing cytology | Yields improve when biopsy, brushing, and washing combined | ||
| Washing cytology | |||
| Radial EBUS-GS | Transbronchial biopsy | 58–70% when biopsy, brushing, and washings combined | 71% in one series examining bronchial brushing |
| For peripheral lesions 2 cm or less | Brushing cytology | ||
| Washing cytology | |||
| EBUS-TBNA | Needle aspirate cytology | Up to 94% | 70–95% |
| Mediastinoscopy | Biopsy | 80–95% | Not well established, but likely adequate based on size |
| CT-guided TTNA | Core-needle biopsy | 80–95% | 100% in one series |
| Needle aspirate | |||
| Thoracentesis | Fluid cytology | 60–80% | Insufficiency rate of 3.7% in one series |
| Medical thoracoscopy | Biopsy | 93–97% | 100% in one series |