| Literature DB >> 31302738 |
Kishore Minhas1, Derek J Roebuck1,2, Alex Barnacle1, Paolo De Coppi3,4,5, Neil Sebire6, Premal A Patel7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Traditionally, ultrasound (US)-guided bowel mass biopsies are avoided in favour of endoscopic or surgical biopsies. However, endoscopy cannot easily reach lesions between the duodenojejunal flexure and the terminal ileum and lesions not involving the mucosa may not be accessible via an endoscopic route.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Biopsy; Bowel; Children; Complication rate; Diagnostic yield; Lymphoma; Ultrasound
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31302738 PMCID: PMC6863949 DOI: 10.1007/s00247-019-04472-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Radiol ISSN: 0301-0449
Fig. 1Transabdominal biopsy of a large bowel mass in a 3-year-old boy presenting with a scrotal mass and subsequently found to have synchronous bowel and testicular lesions. Coronal (a) and axial (b) pre-biopsy MRI demonstrate a bowel wall-based mass (star). Intra-procedural ultrasound (c) shows the biopsy needle in situ (arrow) adjacent to gas and fluid-filled lumen (arrowhead). Tract embolisation (d) with echogenic absorbable gelatin sponge (arrowhead). The histopathological diagnosis was Burkitt lymphoma
Fig. 2Transanal biopsy in 14-year-old girl presenting with a rising lactate dehydrogenase level following a heart transplant. Axial pre-biopsy MRI (a) demonstrates a grossly abnormal and thickened rectum (star). Intra-procedural ultrasound (b) using the urinary bladder filled with saline as an acoustic window (the urinary bladder catheter balloon can be seen in the bladder lumen) demonstrates the transanal biopsy route with a 14-gauge biopsy needle (arrow). The histopathological diagnosis was mature large B cell lymphoma
Fig. 3Photomicrographs of needle core biopsies from the patient in Fig. 1. a There is no normal underlying tissue but complete replacement by viable tumour composed of sheets of uniform tumour cells that infiltrated surrounding structures (haematoxylin and eosin stain: original magnifications × 20). b On high power, the tumour shows a uniform appearance of small ovoid cells, with focal Indian file morphology, with lines of cells between connective tissue structures (haematoxylin and eosin stain: original magnification × 200). c Tumour cells demonstrate diffuse strong membrane expression of CD20 confirming, B cell origin (DAB immunostain with haematoxylin counterstain; original magnification × 200)
Patient characteristics
| Patients, | 19 |
| Biopsies, | 20 |
| Age at biopsy, median (range) | 6 years, 6 months (1 year, 10 months–17 years) |
| Weight at biopsy, kg, median (range) | 22 (10.2–48.4) |
| Gender (male), | 16 (84.2) |
| Diagnosis from each biopsy, | |
| Burkitt lymphoma | 11 (55) |
| Diffuse large B cell lymphoma | 5 (25) |
| Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease | 3 (15) |
| Necrotising granulomatous inflammation | 1 (5) |