| Literature DB >> 30993580 |
Eizaburo Ohno1, Yoshiki Hirooka2, Hiroki Kawashima1, Takuya Ishikawa1, Hiroyuki Tanaka1, Daisuke Sakai1, Yoji Ishizu1, Teiji Kuzuya1, Masanao Nakamura1, Takashi Honda1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To assess the feasibility and the clinical usefulness of a newly developed endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) shear-wave elastography technique (EUS shear-wave measurement: EUS-SWM) in the diagnosis and treatment of autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP).Entities:
Keywords: Autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP); EUS elastography; EUS-SWM (EUS shear-wave measurement); Shear-wave elastography
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30993580 PMCID: PMC6765472 DOI: 10.1007/s10396-019-00944-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Ultrason (2001) ISSN: 1346-4523 Impact factor: 1.314
Fig. 1Illustration of EUS-guided shear-wave measurement. Acoustic radiation force “push pulse” is sent to the focal point in the region of interest. Shear wave is generated at the edge of push pulse and propagates off-axis. Propagation speed calculated from detection of arrival by the search pulses
Fig. 2a A representative case of EUS-guided shear-wave measurement (EUS-SWM) in the pancreatic body of an AIP patient. The scope was positioned in the stomach. The size of the region of interest (ROI) was 5 × 10 mm. The measured data are displayed at the bottom of the screen. The measured shear-wave velocity (Vs) was 2.07 m/s, and the reliability index (VsN) was 81%. b A representative case of measurement of size of pancreatic parenchyma. We measured the size of the pancreas (length of red line) at the measurement site of EUS-SWM
Patient characteristics
| Gender (male/female) | 95/65 |
| Age (median IQR), y | 68 (57–75) |
Normal pancreas defined as patients without abnormal EUS findings in the pancreas
IQR interquartile range, AIP autoimmune pancreatitis, CP chronic pancreatitis, eCP early stage of chronic pancreatitis, IPMN intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm, PC pancreatic cancer, SN serous neoplasm, PanNEN pancreatic neuroendocrine neoplasm, SPN solid pseudopapillary neoplasm
Results of shear-wave velocity (Vs) measurement
| Location | Number of cases | Number of measurements | Median Vs (IQR) m/s | Median VsN (IQR) % | Rate of cases with VsN > 50% | Success rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elasticity of the pancreas | ||||||
| Ph D1 | 124 | 883 | 2.22 (1.77–2.78) | 83 (48–100) | 73.9 | 98.1% (866/883) |
| Ph D2 | 100 | 712 | 2.36 (1.70–2.85) | 75 (41–98) | 70.1 | 96.9% (690/712) |
| Pb | 155 | 1130 | 1.99 (1.51–2.53) | 74 (40–96) | 67.5 | 96.3% (1088/1130) |
| Pt | 132 | 1112 | 2.22 (1.77–2.78) | 83 (48–100) | 61.2 | 98.8% (1099/1112) |
| Total | 160 | 3837 | 2.21 (1.65–2.82) | 74 (38–97) | 67.6 | 97.6% (3743/3837) |
D1 measured from the duodenal bulb, D2 measured from the descending part of the duodenum
Fig. 3The measured shear-wave velocity (Vs) in the pancreas. The elasticity of the pancreatic body was significantly lower than that in other pancreatic areas, b pancreatic body, D1 pancreatic head from the duodenal bulb, D2 pancreatic head from the descending portion of the duodenum, t pancreatic tail
Fig. 4The measured reliability index (VsN) in the pancreas. Relationship between VsN and the location of measurement. VsN tended to be higher at the pancreatic head and body
Fig. 5Patient flow diagram
Characteristics of patients with autoimmune pancreatitis
| Gender (male/female) | 7:1 |
| Age (median IQR), y | 71 (57–76) |
| Naïve:Relapse | 6:2 |
| Symptom | Jaundice/Cholangitis 5 |
| Abdominal discomfort 1 |
Fig. 6a The median Vs of the pancreatic body in patients with autoimmune pancreatitis (AIP) and in normal controls. The medial elasticity of AIP patients was significantly higher than that of normal controls. b The median size of the pancreatic body in patients with AIP and in normal controls. There was no significant difference between AIP and normal control
Fig. 7a Changes in the elasticity of the pancreas (Vs) before and after steroid treatment. The median Vs decreased significantly after administration of corticosteroids. b Changes in the size of the pancreatic body on CT before and after steroid treatment. The size of the pancreatic body on CT decreased significantly after steroid therapy. c Changes in serum IgG4 level before and after steroid treatment. Serum IgG4 levels did not decrease in the 2 weeks after administration of corticosteroids. d Changes in the size of the pancreatic body measured by EUS before and after steroid treatment. The size of the pancreatic body showed a decreasing trend, but there was no statistically significant difference after steroid therapy