| Literature DB >> 28497108 |
Muhammad Ali Khan1, Ian S Grimm2, Bilal Ali1, Richard Nollan3, Claudio Tombazzi1, Mohammad Kashif Ismail1, Todd H Baron2.
Abstract
Background The diagnostic yield of endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) guided fine-needle aspiration (FNA) is variable, and partly dependent upon rapid onsite evaluation (ROSE) by a cytopathologist. Second generation fine-needle biopsy (FNB) needles are being increasingly used to obtain core histological tissue samples. Aims Studies comparing the diagnostic yield of EUS guided FNA versus FNB have reached conflicting conclusions. We therefore conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to compare the diagnostic yield of FNA with FNB, and specifically evaluating the diagnostic value of ROSE while comparing the two types of needles. Methods We searched several databases from inception to 10 April 2016 to identify studies comparing diagnostic yield of second generation FNB needles with standard FNA needles. Risk ratios (RR) were calculated for categorical outcomes of interest (diagnostic adequacy, diagnostic accuracy, and optimal quality histological cores obtained). Standard mean difference (SMD) was calculated for continuous variables (number of passes required for diagnosis). These were pooled using random effects model of meta-analysis to account for heterogeneity. Meta-regression was conducted to evaluate the effect of ROSE on various outcomes of interest. Results Fifteen studies with a total of 1024 patients were included in the analysis. We found no significant difference in diagnostic adequacy [RR 0.98 (0.91, 1.06), (I2 = 51 %)]. Although not statistically significant (P = 0.06), by meta-regression, in the absence of ROSE, FNB showed a relatively better diagnostic adequacy. For solid pancreatic lesions only, there was no difference in diagnostic adequacy [RR 0.96 (0.86, 1.09), (I2 = 66 %)]. By meta-regression, in the absence of ROSE, FNB was associated with better diagnostic adequacy (P = 0.02). There was no difference in diagnostic accuracy [RR 0.99 (0.95, 1.03), (I2 = 27 %)] or optimal quality core histological sample procurement [RR 0.97 (0.89, 1.05), (I2 = 9.6 %)]. However, FNB established diagnosis with fewer passes [SMD 0.93 (0.45, 1.42), (I2 = 84 %)]. The absence of ROSE was associated with a higher SMD, i. e., in the presence of an onsite pathologist, FNA required relatively fewer passes to establish the diagnosis than in the absence of an onsite pathologist. Conclusions There is no significant difference in the diagnostic yield between FNA and FNB, when FNA is accompanied by ROSE. However, in the absence of ROSE, FNB is associated with a relatively better diagnostic adequacy in solid pancreatic lesions. Also, FNB requires fewer passes to establish the diagnosis.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28497108 PMCID: PMC5425293 DOI: 10.1055/s-0043-101693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endosc Int Open ISSN: 2196-9736
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart (study selection process).
Characteristics of included studies.
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| Bang, 2012 (USA) | Randomized trial | Pancreas | All patients referred for solid pancreatic lesions on CT scan | Cystic pancreatic lesions, coagulopathy, lesions not seen on EUS | 56 | 31 | 65 | Yes | No | Yes | 6 months |
| Hucl, 2013 (India) | Prospective | Pancreas & lymph nodes | Consecutive patients with pancreatic masses or peri-intestinal nodes | Lesion not seen on EUS | 145 | 80 | 48 | No | Yes | No | 6 months |
| Witt, 2013 (USA) | Retrospective | Pancreas, gastric, mediastinal and pelvic nodes | First 18 patients undergoing EUS guided FNB for various lesions. Site matched controls undergoing EUS-FNA | NR | 36 | NR | NR | Yes | Yes | No | 3.3 months |
| Kim, 2014 (Korea) | Randomized trial | Subepithelial lesions | Hypoechoic mass in submucosa and/or proper muscle layers, > 2 cm in size | Tumors not located in submucosa and/or proper muscle layers, cystic lesion, overlying vessel, platelet < 50 000, PT > 50 %, lipoma on EUS | 22 | 10 | 56.3 | No | Yes | No | NR |
| Vanbiervliet, 2014 (France) | Randomized trial | Pancreas | Pancreatic mass on CT scan, dilated CBD and or dilated PD | Cystic lesions, uncorrectable coagulopathy, pregnancy | 80 | 49 | 67.1 | No | Yes | Yes | 6.4 months |
| Lee, 2014 (Korea) | Randomized trial | Pancreas | Solid pancreatic mass on CT or MRI, age > 18 years | Cystic mass, INR > 1.5, platelets < 80 000 | 116 | 77 | 64.9 | Yes | Yes | No | 6 months |
| Strand, 2014 (USA) | Prospective | Pancreas | Age 18 – 90 years, solid pancreatic mass on CT scan | Cystic lesion, no mass seen on EUS, uncorrectable coagulopathy | 32 | 13 | 67.7 | Yes | Yes | No | NR |
| Lin, 2014 (USA) | Prospective | Pancreas, lymph nodes, gastric, mediastinal nodes, liver lesions | All patients referred for EUS guided biopsy underwent both FNA and FNB | Core biopsy not performed if cystic lesions, < 1 cm lesion, overlying vascular structures precluding biopsy | 26 | 25 | 66.8 | Yes | Yes | NR | 12 months |
| Mavrogenis, 2015 (Belgium) | Prospective | Pancreas, lymph nodes | All patients > 18 years old with pancreatic lesions or lymphadenopathy referred for EUS sampling | Cystic lesion, age < 18 years, pregnancy, INR > 1.5, platelet < 50 000 | 28 | 9 | 69 (med) | No | Yes | No | 7 months |
| Berzosa, 2015 (USA) | Retrospective | Pancreas | Patients with solid pancreatic lesions on CT scan undergoing EUS sampling | NR | 61 | 35 | 61 | Yes | NR | No | 6 months |
| Alatawi, 2015 (France) | Prospective | Pancreas | Solid pancreatic tumors > 2 cm size on CT or MRI | Cystic lesions, patients with biliary stents | 100 | 63 | 68.4 | No | Yes | Yes | NR |
| Yang, 2015 (Korea) | Retrospective | Pancreas | Solid pancreatic lesions in consecutive patients undergoing EUS | NR | 76 | 35 | 62.4 | No | Yes | Yes | 6 months |
| Dwyer, 2016 (USA) | Retrospective | Pancreas, gastric and colon submucosal mass, pelvic and perirectal masses | All EUS guided biopsies of solid intraabdominal masses | NR | 58 | 32 | 63 | Yes | NR | NR | NR |
| Kandel, 2016 (USA) | Retrospective | Pancreas, liver, subepithelial lesions, lymph nodes | Consecutive patients undergoing EUS-FNB were matched with random controls undergoing EUS-FNA ratio of 1:3 | NR | 156 | 84 | 66 | Yes | NR | NR | NR |
| Rodrigues-Pinto, 2016 (USA) | Retrospective | Pancreas, lymph nodes, submucosal lesions | NR | NR | 33 | 15 | 65 | Yes | Yes | NR | NR |
NR, not reported; CBD, common bile duct; PD, pancreatic duct; INR, international normalized ratio; PT, prothrombin time; EUS, endoscopic ultrasound; FNB, fine-needle biopsy; FNA, fine-needle aspiration; ROSE, rapid onsite evaluation.
Outcomes assessed in meta-analysis.
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| Bang, 2012 (USA) | FNAFNB | 2222 | 28/2825 /28 | 28/2825 /28 | 8/1214 /18 | 1.61 (0.88)1.28 (0.54) | High risk of performance bias, low risk for selection, detection, attrition, and reporting bias | ||||
| Hucl, 2013 (India) | FNAFNB | 2222 | 127/145125 /145 | 60/6964 /69 | 112/139110 /139 | 51/6959 /69 | 96/139100 /139 | 2.47 (0.93)1.23 (0.47) | 8 | ||
| Witt, 2013 (USA) | FNAFNB | 2222 | 16/1817 /18 | 17/1817 /18 | 10/138 /11 | 2.942.11 | 6 | ||||
| Kim, 2014 (Korea) | FNAFNB | 2222 | 2/109/12 | 2/109/12 | 2/109/12 | 3.2 (1.3)1.8 (0.9) | High risk of performance bias, low risk for selection, detection, attrition, and reporting bias | ||||
| Vanbiervliet, 2014 (France) | FNAFNB | 2222 | NRNR | 74/8072/80 | 70/8056/80 | NRNR | High risk of performance bias, low risk for selection, detection, attrition, and reporting bias | ||||
| Lee, 2014 (Korea) | FNAFNB | 22 & 2522 & 25 | NRNR | 55/5857/58 | 45/5848/58 | NRNR | High risk of performance bias, low risk for selection, detection, attrition, and reporting bias | ||||
| Strand, 2014 (USA) | FNAFNB | 2222 | 32/3219/27 | 30/329/27 | 7/919/27 | 2.9 (1.55)1.4 (0.67 | 4 | ||||
| Lin, 2014 (USA) | FNAFNB | 2222 | NRNR | 24/2622/26 | NRNR | NRNR | 6 | ||||
| Mavrogenis, 2015 (Belgium) | FNAFNB | 2225 | 22/2824/28 | 15/1916/19 | 24/2824/28 | 17/1917/19 | 24/2822/28 | 17/1915/19 | NRNR | 7 | |
| Berzosa, 2015 (USA) | FNAFNB | 2522 | 50/6145/61 | 46/6142/61 | NRNR | NRNR | 6 | ||||
| Alatawi, 2015 (France) | FNAFNB | 2222 | 45/5050/50 | 42/5045/50 | 3.28 (1.0)2.59 (0.49) | 8 | |||||
| Yang, 2015 (Korea) | FNAFNB | 2225 | NRNR | 37/3834/38 | 23/3826/38 | NRNR | 7 | ||||
| Dwyer, 2016 (USA) | FNA FNB | 22 & 2522 & 25 | 14/1838/49 | 12/1535/40 | 12/1837/49 | 10/1534/40 | NRNR | NRNR | 3.483.57 | 6 | |
| Kandel, 2016 (USA) | FNAFNB | 19,22,2519,22,25 | 108/11437/39 | NRNR | 23/6713/37 | NRNR | 8 | ||||
| Rodrigues-Pinto, 2016 (USA) | FNAFNB | 22, 2522, 25 | NRNR | 26/3330/33 | NRNR | NRNR | 7 | ||||
FNA, fine-needle aspiration; FNB, fine-needle biopsy; NOS, Newcastle Ottawa Scale; NR, not reported; SD, standard deviation.
Fig. 2Forrest plot for diagnostic adequacy of FNA in comparison to FNB.
Fig. 3Scatterplot for meta-regression analysis for onsite pathology in diagnostic adequacy (P = 0.06).
Fig. 4Forrest plot for diagnostic adequacy of FNA in comparison to FNB for pancreatic lesions.
Fig. 5Scatterplot for meta-regression analysis for onsite pathology in diagnostic adequacy for pancreatic lesions (P = 0.02).
Fig. 6Forrest plot for diagnostic accuracy of FNA in comparison to FNB.
Fig. 7Forrest plot for diagnostic accuracy of FNA in comparison to FNB in pancreatic lesions.
Fig. 8Forrest plot for optimal histological core procurement comparing FNA with FNB.
Fig. 9Forrest plot for optimal histological core procurement comparing FNA with FNB in pancreatic lesions.
Fig. 10Forrest plot for number of passes required for diagnosis with FNA in comparison to FNB.
Fig. 11Scatterplot for meta-regression evaluating effect of onsite pathology on number of passes.