| Literature DB >> 30574535 |
Dennis Yang1, Jason B Samarasena2, Laith H Jamil3, Kenneth J Chang2, David Lee2, Mel A Ona2, Simon K Lo3, Srinivas Gaddam3, Quin Liu3, Peter V Draganov1.
Abstract
Background and study aims Accurate diagnosis and classification of pancreatic cysts (PCs) remains a challenge. The aims of this study were to: (1) evaluate the safety and technical success of a novel microforceps for EUS-guided through-the-needle biopsy (TTNB) of PCs; and (2) assess its diagnostic yield for mucinous PCs when compared to FNA cyst fluid analysis and cytology. Patients and methods This was a multicenter retrospective analysis of 47 patients who underwent EUS-FNA and TTNB for PCs between January 2014 and June 2017. Technical success was defined as acquisition of a specimen adequate for cytologic or histological evaluation. Cyst fluid carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) was used to initially categorize cysts as non-mucinous (CEA < 192 ng/mL) or mucinous (CEA ≥ 192 ng/mL). Final diagnosis was based on identifiable mucinous pancreatic cystic epithelium on cytology, microforceps histology and/or surgical histology when available. Results Forty-seven patients with PCs (mean size 30.7 mm) were included. TTNB was successfully performed in 46 of 47 (97.9 %). Technical success was significantly lower with FNA (48.9 %) compared to TTNB (85.1 %) ( P < .001). For cysts with insufficient amount of fluid for CEA (n = 19) or CEA < 192 ng/mL, the cumulative incremental diagnostic yield of a mucinous PC was significantly higher with TTNB vs. FNA (52.6 % vs 18.4 %; P = .004). TTNB alone (34.4 %) diagnosed more mucinous PCs than either CEA ≥ 192 ng/mL alone (6.3 %) or when combined with FNA cytology (9.4 %). One episode of self-limited bleeding (2.1 %) and one of pancreatitis (2.1 %) occurred. Conclusions EUS-TTNB is safe and effective for evaluating PCs. TTNB may help increase the diagnostic yield of mucinous PCs.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30574535 PMCID: PMC6281441 DOI: 10.1055/a-0770-2700
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endosc Int Open ISSN: 2196-9736
Fig. 1 aThrough-the-needle forceps device with open jaws (4.3 mm) (Moray Micro Forceps, US Endoscopy, Mentor, Ohio, United States). b Through-the-needle forceps device through the bore of a 19-gauge FNA needle. Image is courtesy of US Endoscopy. Unauthorized use not permitted.
Fig. 2EUS-guided through-the-needle biopsy (TTNB) with the microforceps.
Fig. 3Histologic specimen obtained with TTNB of a pancreas cyst. Mucinous columnar epithelial cells (gastric subtype) of an intrapapillary mucinous neoplasm. Image courtesy of Yuxin Lu, MD; Department of Pathology, University of California, Irvine, California, United States.
Demographics.
| Age, mean ± SD | 66.2 ± 13.1 years |
| Sex; n (%) | |
Male | 21 (44.7) |
Female | 26 (55.3) |
| Past medical history; n (%) | |
Acute pancreatitis | 4 (8.5) |
Chronic pancreatitis | 1 (2.1) |
Both | 1 (2.1) |
| Pancreas cyst size, mean (range) | 30.8 (11.6 – 110) mm |
| Cyst location; n (%) | |
Head | 16 (34.0) |
Neck | 6 (12.8) |
Body | 13 (27.7) |
Tail | 12 (25.5) |
| Cyst appearance on EUS; n (%) | |
Unilocular | 16 (34) |
Septated | 35 (74.5) |
Presence of mural nodule | 7 (14.9) |
Communicating with main pancreatic duct | 16 (34) |
Presence of solid component | 5 (10.6) |
EUS, endoscopic ultrasound
Pancreas cyst cytologic and histopathologic diagnosis.
| EUS-FNA cytology | EUS-TTNB histology | |
| Inadequate specimen | ||
Not performed | 0 | 1 |
Insufficient sample (scant cellularity) | 23 | 6 |
| Atypical cells | 2 | 0 |
| Mucinous cyst | 10 | 26 |
| Adenocarcinoma | 1 | 0 |
| Benign fibrous tissue, epithelium or glandular cells | 9 | 7 |
| Cellular debris/inflammatory cells | 2 | 2 |
| Serous cystadenoma | 0 | 4 |
EUS-FNA, endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration; EUS-TTNS, endoscopic ultrasound-guided through-the-needle biopsy
CEA analysis and incremental diagnostic yield of EUS-FNA cytology and EUS-microforceps histology.
| Cysts; n (%) | Median CEA (ng/mL) | Positive FNA cytology (incremental yield%) | Positive TTNB histology (incremental yield %) |
| |
| CEA not available | 19 | N/A | 6 (31.6 %) | 12 (63.2 %) | .10 |
| CEA < 192 ng/mL | 19 | 23.6 | 1 (5.3 %) | 8 (42.1 %) | .02 |
| CEA > 192 ng/mL | 9 | 327 | 3 (n/a) | 6 (n/a) | N/A |
CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen; EUS-FNA, endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration
Surgical pathology as compared to FNA cytology and TTNB histology in 8 patients.
| Case | CEA (ng/mL) | High-risk features on imaging | EUS-FNA | EUS-microforceps | Surgical pathology |
| 1 | NA | Cyst ≥ 3 cm | Mucinous-type epithelium | IPMN (no subtype) | Branch-duct IPMN with low grade dysplasia |
| 2 | NA | Mural nodule | Mucinous-type epithelium with moderate dysplasia | IPMN (intestinal subtype) with moderate dysplasia | Main-duct IPMN with low grade dysplasia; intestinal subtype |
| 3 | 2.2 | None | Adenocarcinoma | Fibrous tissue | Benign specimen |
| 4 | NA | Cyst ≥ 3 cm and mural nodule | No malignant cells identified, abundant mucin | IPMN | Branch-duct IPMN (gastric subtype) with low grade dysplasia |
| 5 | 34.7 | None | Scant cellularity | IPMN with high-grade dysplasia | IPMN with focal high-grade dysplasia |
| 6 | NA | Mural nodule | Scant cellularity | Atrophic glands and fibrotic stroma | IPMN with low to moderate dysplasia |
| 7 | 1.2 | Cyst ≥ 3 cm | Scant cellularity | IPMN | IPMN with low grade dysplasia (intestinal and pancreaticobiliary subtype) |
| 8 | NA | None | Suspicious cells | IPMN with high-grade dysplasia | IPMN with high-grade dysplasia |
CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen; EUS, endoscopic ultrasound; FNA, fine-needle aspiration; IPMN, intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm
Fig. 4Diagnosis of mucinous cysts.
Fig. 5Assessment of final and suspected diagnoses in study participants.