| Literature DB >> 27113209 |
Erik E Folch1,2, Mark R Bowling3, Thomas R Gildea4, Kristin L Hood5, Septimiu D Murgu6, Eric M Toloza7, Momen M Wahidi8, Terence Williams9, Sandeep J Khandhar10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Electromagnetic navigation bronchoscopy (ENB) procedures allow physicians to access peripheral lung lesions beyond the reach of conventional bronchoscopy. However, published research is primarily limited to small, single-center studies using previous-generation ENB software. The impact of user experience, patient factors, and lesion/procedural characteristics remains largely unexplored in a large, multicenter study. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Bronchoscopy; Electromagnetic navigation; Image-guided biopsy; Lung cancer; Lung neoplasms; Neoplasm staging; Solitary pulmonary nodule; superDimension
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27113209 PMCID: PMC4845335 DOI: 10.1186/s12890-016-0228-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Prior clinical studies on ENB to aid in the diagnosis of peripheral lung lesions
| First author and year | Study design | Number of centers | Number of subjects | Length of follow-up | Diagnostic yield aided by ENB procedures (%) | Pneumothorax (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Becker 2005 [ | Prospective, single-arm | Single-center | 29 | N.R. | 69.0 | 3.4 |
| Gildea 2006 [ | Prospective, single-arm | Single-center | 58 | Mean 10.5 months | 74.1 | 3.5 |
| Schwarz 2006 [ | Prospective, single-arm | Single-center | 13 | N.R. | 69.2 | 0.0 |
| Eberhardt 2007a [ | Prospective, RCT (EBUS only, ENB only, or combined) | Multi-center (2) | 39 (ENB alone) 40 (ENB + EBUS) | N.R. | 59.0 (ENB alone) 87.5 (ENB + EBUS) | 5.0 |
| Eberhardt 2007b [ | Prospective, single-arm | Multi-center (2) | 89 | N.R. | 67.4 | 2.2 |
| Makris 2007 [ | Prospective, single-arm | Single-center | 40 | N.R. | 62.5 | 7.5 |
| Wilson 2007 [ | Retrospective, single-arm | Single-center | 222 | 6 – 18 months | 59.9 | 1.2 |
| Bertoletti 2009 [ | Prospective, single-arm | Single-center | 53 | >18 months | 77.4 | 4.0 |
| Lamprecht 2009 [ | Retrospective, single-arm | Single-center | 13 | N.R. | 76.9 | 0.0 |
| Eberhardt 2010 [ | Prospective, single-arm | Single-center | 53 | N.R. | 75.5 | 1.9 |
| Seijo 2010 [ | Prospective, single-arm | Single-center | 51 | N.R. | 66.7 | 0.0 |
| Mahajan 2011 [ | Retrospective, single-arm | Single-center | 48 | N.R. | 77.0 | 10.2 |
| Brownback 2012 [ | Retrospective, single-arm | Single-center | 55 | N.R. | 74.5 | 0.0 |
| Jensen 2012 [ | Retrospective, single-arm | Multi-center (5) | 92 | ≥6 months | 65.2 | 3.3 |
| Lamprecht 2012 [ | Prospective, single-arm | Single-center | 112 | N.R. | 83.9 | 1.8 |
| Pearlstein 2012 [ | Retrospective, single-arm | Single-center | 101 | 2 years | 85.1 | 5.8 |
| Balbo 2013 [ | Retrospective, single-arm | Single-center | 40 | N.R. | 70.7 | 0.0 |
| Karnak 2013 [ | Prospective, single-arm | Single-center | 35 | ≥2 years | 91.4 | 3.9 |
| Khan 2013 [ | Prospective, single-arm | Single-center | 24 | N.R. | 75.0 | 0.0 |
| Mohanasundaram 2013 [ | Retrospective, single-arm | Single-center | 41 | ≤2 years | 89.4 | 13.0 |
| Loo 2014 [ | Retrospective, single-arm | Single-center | 40 | N.R. | 94.0 | 0.0 |
| Odronic 2014 [ | Retrospective, single-arm | Single-center | 91 | 1 year | 85.7 | 5.3 |
| Bowling 2015 [ | Retrospective, single-arm | Single-center | 107 | ≥18 months | 73.6 | 2.5 |
| Ost 2015 [ | Retrospective | Multi-center | 39 (ENB a alone) 227 (ENB a + EBUS) | 1 year | 38.5 (ENB alone) 47.1 (ENB + EBUS) | 1.7 % |
Acronyms: EBUS endobronchial ultrasound, ENB electromagnetic navigation bronchoscopy, RCT randomized controlled trial
aIncludes 252 cases using the superDimension™ navigation system, 8 cases using other electromagnetic navigation methods, and 14 cases using CT fluoroscopy. More than one method was used in some patients. In the publication by Ost et al., [29], diagnostic yield included only those cases with a specific malignant or benign diagnosis. If only inflammatory tissue or lymphocytes was obtained, the procedure was considered nondiagnostic
Study assessments
| Subject demographics |
| • Age |
| • Sex |
| • Ethnicity |
| • Race |
| Subject medical history and baseline status |
| • Prior invasive lung procedures and surgeries |
| • Lung function and diffusing capacity |
| • Antithrombotic medication current and prior status, including duration of any discontinuation |
| • Subject risk factors |
| • Pre-procedure probability of malignancy |
| • Quality of life (EQ-5D) |
| Lesion characteristics |
| • Size |
| • Location |
| • Presence of bronchus sign on computerized tomography (CT) |
| • Lung zone (peripheral, middle, and proximal thirds) |
| • Visibility on fluoroscopy (if applicable) |
| • Positron emission tomography (PET)-positive (yes/no) |
| • Associated lymphadenopathy |
| • Distance to closest fissure |
| • Distance from lesion to pleura |
| • Preprocedure probability of malignancy (investigator assessment) |
| Procedural assessments |
| • Indication for procedure |
| • Anesthesia type |
| • Catheter type |
| • Procedure duration |
| • Imaging used (fluoroscopy, PET, radial endobronchial ultrasound [EBUS]) |
| • Ability to successfully navigate to lesion |
| • Use of associated tools and type (e.g., access tools, biopsy forceps, cytology brush, aspiration needle) |
| • Number of lesions biopsied |
| • Number of lymph nodes biopsied (if applicable) |
| • Placement of fiducial markers (if applicable), type used, indication, and status at follow-up imaging |
| • Surgical resection, including use of dye marker, type used, and adequacy for surgical resection |
| • Diagnosis by both cytologic rapid on-site evaluation (ROSE) and pathology |
| • Cancer type (primary or metastatic), if applicable |
| • Cancer stage, if applicable |
| • Adequacy of sample for molecular testing and mutation type (if applicable) |
| • Lymph node number, station, size, and success in obtaining sample (if applicable) |
| • Number and type of repeat electromagnetic navigational bronchoscopy (ENB) procedures or other biopsies |
| • Other health services (e.g., imaging, transfusion, surgery, emergency room admission, prescriptions) received during admission for index procedure |
| • Hospital admission duration |
| • Adverse events, action taken, relationship to device, and outcome |
| Follow-up assessments |
| • Subject satisfaction (at 1-month follow-up only) |
| • Subject quality of life (EQ-5D) at all follow-up visits |
| • ENB Productivity and Activity Questionnaire (ENB-PAQ) at 1 month visit |
| • All health services (e.g., imaging, transfusion, surgery, emergency room admission, prescriptions) received since last visit |
| • All healthcare services related to lung health since index procedure (e.g., primary care and specialist visits, hospital, emergency room, oncology, radiology, pain management). |
| • All therapeutic and diagnostic procedures and diagnoses related to lung health since last visit |
| • Adverse events, action taken, relationship to device, and outcome |
Study definitions
| Bronchopulmonary hemorrhage |
| A disorder characterized by bleeding from the bronchial wall and/or lung parenchyma. Degree of severity will be classified according to Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) grade [ |
| • Grade 2: Moderate symptoms; medical intervention indicated |
| • Grade 3: Transfusion, radiologic, endoscopic, or operative intervention indicated (e.g., hemostasis of bleeding site) |
| • Grade 4: Life-threatening respiratory or hemodynamic compromise; intubation or urgent intervention indicated |
| • Grade 5: Death |
| Bronchopulmonary hemorrhage will also be reported based on a newly validated airway bleeding scale (E. Folch and S. Khandhar, unpublished personal communication; publication in progress). |
| Diagnostic yield |
| Diagnostic yield of the ENB procedure will be calculated on a per-subject basis out of all subjects in whom a diagnostic biopsy is attempted and is defined as the proportion of subjects in whom the ENB procedure yielded a definitive diagnosis. Accuracy of all diagnoses aided by the ENB procedure, as well as nondiagnostic cases, will evaluated based on 2-year clinical follow-up (see below). |
| Diagnostic accuracy |
| Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV) will be calculated as the accuracy of the ENB-aided diagnosis (based on final pathology results) compared to the final 2-year diagnosis based on all available procedures and follow-up. |
| Where a = true positive, b = false positive, c = false negative, and d = true negative: |
| • Sensitivity: Probability that an ENB-guided biopsy will be positive when malignancy is present (true positive rate): = a/(a + c) |
| • Specificity: Probability that an ENB-guided biopsy will be negative when malignancy is not present (true negative rate): = d/(b + d) |
| • PPV: Probability that malignancy is present when an ENB-guided biopsy is positive: = a/(a + b) |
| • NPV: Probability that malignancy is not present when an ENB-guided biopsy is negative: = d/(c + d) |
| Lesion size |
| Defined as greatest diameter of the target lesion. |
| Navigation Accuracy |
| Distance between the tip of the locatable guide and the targeted lung lesion (not done for lymph nodes). |
| Navigation success |
| The proportion of cases in which the operator is able to successfully navigate to the lung target with ENB guidance, based on investigator self-assessment. |
| Navigation time |
| Total time that the locatable guide is used in the subject during the ENB procedure. |
| Peripheral lung lesion |
| A lesion that is located in the outer third of the lung and difficult to reach by traditional bronchoscopy (see Additional file |
| Pneumothorax |
| A disorder characterized by abnormal presence of air in the pleural cavity resulting in the collapse of the lung. The primary endpoint is the incidence of pneumothorax related to the ENB index procedure rated as Grade 2 or higher. All grades will be captured as a secondary endpoint. Degree of severity will be classified according to CTCAE grade as follows: |
| • Grade 1: Asymptomatic; clinical or diagnostic observations only; intervention not indicated. |
| • Grade 2: Symptomatic; intervention indicated (e.g., tube placement without sclerosis). |
| • Grade 3: Sclerosis and/or operative intervention indicated; hospitalization indicated. |
| • Grade 4: Life-threatening consequences; urgent intervention indicated. |
| • Grade 5: Death. |
| Pneumothorax severity will also be reported based on a newly validated scale that takes into account variance in international standard of care for observation and intervention following asymptomatic pneumothorax and compared to the CTCAE criteria. |
| Procedure time |
| Time between initial introduction of the locatable guide into the body and final removal of the locatable guide. |
| Repeat biopsy |
| Additional biopsy or biopsies conducted after the ENB-guided index procedure, required due to insufficient tissue collection for diagnosis at the index procedure. |
| Respiratory failure |
| A disorder characterized by impaired gas exchange by the respiratory system resulting in hypoxemia and a decrease in oxygenation of the tissues that may be associated with an increase in arterial levels of carbon dioxide. Degree of severity will be classified according to CTCAE grade as follows: |
| • Grade 4: Life-threatening consequences; urgent intervention, intubation, or ventilatory support indicated. |
| • Grade 5: Death. |
| Stage |
| Lung cancer staging will be defined according to the Revised International System for Staging Lung Cancer (TNM) Classification System. |
| Tissue adequacy |
| Tissue adequacy is defined as the proportion of cases in which tissue obtained during the ENB index procedure is adequate for subtyping of lung cancer and molecular testing when appropriate |