| Literature DB >> 30626331 |
Renáta Bor1, Béla Vasas2, Anna Fábián1, Anita Bálint1, Klaudia Farkas1, Ágnes Milassin1, László Czakó1, Mariann Rutka1, Tamás Molnár1, Mónika Szűcs3, László Tiszlavicz2, László Kaizer2, Sándor Hamar2, Zoltán Szepes4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The usage of endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration (EUS-FNA) for the diagnosis of solid pancreatic cancer is increasing, however mainly retrospective studies are available about the detailed methods of sampling.Entities:
Keywords: EUS-FNA; Endoscopic ultrasound; Endosonography; Pancreatic cancer; Sampling
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30626331 PMCID: PMC6327397 DOI: 10.1186/s12876-018-0921-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Bloodiness of smears
| Cellularity of smears | |
| 0 - Acellular | No or only a few tumor cells |
| 1 – Low | < 2 clusters of malignant cells with a minimum 10 tumor cells |
| 2 – Medium | 2-4 clusters of malignant cells with a minimum 10 tumor cells |
| 3 – High | > 4 clusters of malignant cells with a minimum 10 tumor cells |
| Bloodness of smears | |
| 0 - Absence | No or minimal blood contamination |
| 1 – Mild | A few blood cells which do not interfere with pathological evaluation |
| 2 – Moderate | Partially covered by blood cells, but pathological evaluation is possible |
| 3 – Severe | Covered by blood cells which interfere with pathological evaluation |
Classification of Papanicolaou Society for assessment of cytological sampling of the pancreatobiliary system. (NET - neuroendocrine tumor; IPMN - intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm; MCN - mucinous cystic neoplasm)
| Papanicolaou society of cytopathology system for reporting pancreaticobiliary cytology | |
|---|---|
| I. Non-diagnostic | |
| II. Negative (for malignancy) | Benign pancreatic tissue |
| III. Atypical | |
| IV. Neoplastic - Benign | Serous cystadenoma |
| IV. Neoplastic - Other | Well-differentiated NET |
| V. Suspicious (for malignancy) | |
| VI. Positive or Malignant | Ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas and its variants |
Baseline characteristics of patients and sampling (CA19–9 – carcinoma antigen 19–9; CgA – chromogranin A; LMWH – low molecular weight heparin; PAI – platelet aggregation inhibitors)
| Patients ( | Sampling ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Male/female | 38/51 | Examiners: Z.Sz/L.Cz | 70/22 |
| Age (year) | 66.1 | Punctures per examination | 4 (3–7; median: 4) |
| Tumor location | 3 2 punctures | 23 (25%) | |
| Head | 71 (79.8%) | ||
| Tumor size (mm) | 31.8 | LMWH | 10 (10.9%) |
| CA 19–9 | |||
| Elevated | 44 (47.2%) | Needle type | 37 (40.2%) |
Fig. 1Efficacy of sampling according to the classification of Papanicolaou Society. Grey color shows the non-diagnostic and black the diagnostic categories
Comparison of standard suction and stylet capillary technique
| Capillary Technique | Standard Suction | |
|---|---|---|
| Technical success rate | 85 (92.4%) | 92 (100%) |
| Diagnostic yield | 60 (65.2%) | 62 (67.4%) |
| Histological sample obtained | 49 (53.3%) | 46 (50.0%) |
| Diagnostic yield of histological sample | 31 (63.2%) | 27 (58.7%) |
Fig. 2Venn diagram: distribution of diagnostic samples obtained by the flushing of the needle, SS and SP techniques
Fig. 3The mean number of smear pairs per puncture obtained by standard suction was significantly higher (p < 0.001) and the proportion of diagnostic slides was lower compared whit stylet capillary technique (p = 0.003)
Fig. 4There was no difference between the cellularity of smears obtained by stylet capillary technique and standard suction, but the bloodiness was significantly higher in the standard suction group (p < 0.001)
Efficacy of EUS-FNA in the identification of pancreatic malignancy (NPV – negative predictive value; PPV – positive predictive value)
| Efficacy of Eus-FNA in the identification of pancreatic neoplasm | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Independently from the method | Slow-Pull | Standard suction | |
| Sensitivity | 83.1% | 69.9% | 73.5% |
| Specificity | 100% | 100% | 100% |
| NPV | 39.1% | 26.5% | 29% |
| PPV | 100% | 100% | 100% |
| Accuracy | 84.8% | 72.8% | 76.1% |