| Literature DB >> 33767027 |
Moon Jae Chung1, Se Woo Park2, Seong-Hun Kim3, Chang Min Cho4, Jun-Ho Choi5, Eun Kwang Choi6, Tae Hoon Lee7, Eunae Cho8, Jun Kyu Lee9, Tae Jun Song10, Jae Min Lee11, Jun Hyuk Son12, Jin Suk Park13, Chi Hyuk Oh14, Dong-Ah Park15, Jeong-Sik Byeon10, Soo Teik Lee3, Ho Gak Kim16, Hoon Jai Chun11, Ho Soon Choi17, Chan Guk Park18, Joo Young Cho19.
Abstract
Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided tissue acquisition of pancreatic solid tumor requires a strict recommendation for its proper use in clinical practice because of its technical difficulty and invasiveness. The Korean Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (KSGE) appointed a task force to draft clinical practice guidelines for EUS-guided tissue acquisition of pancreatic solid tumor. The strength of recommendation and the level of evidence for each statement were graded according to the Minds Handbook for Clinical Practice Guideline Development 2014. The committee, comprising a development panel of 16 endosonographers and an expert on guideline development methodology, developed 12 evidence-based recommendations in eight categories intended to help physicians make evidence-based clinical judgments with regard to the diagnosis of pancreatic solid tumor. This clinical practice guideline discusses EUS-guided sampling in pancreatic solid tumor and makes recommendations on circumstances that warrant its use, technical issues related to maximizing the diagnostic yield (e.g., needle type, needle diameter, adequate number of needle passes, sample obtaining techniques, and methods of specimen processing), adverse events of EUS-guided tissue acquisition, and learning-related issues. This guideline was reviewed by external experts and suggests best practices recommended based on the evidence available at the time of preparation. This guideline may not be applicable for all clinical situations and should be interpreted in light of specific situations and the availability of resources. It will be revised as necessary to cover progress and changes in technology and evidence from clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Endoscopic ultrasound; Guideline; Pancreatic solid tumor; Technique; Tissue
Year: 2021 PMID: 33767027 PMCID: PMC8129669 DOI: 10.5009/gnl20302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut Liver ISSN: 1976-2283 Impact factor: 4.519
Task Force Team for the Guidelines for EUS-Guided Tissue Acquisition from Solid Pancreatic Tumors
| KSGE Clinical Practice Guideline Committee | |
| President | Hoon Jai Chun (in November 2017) |
| Joo Young Cho (present) | |
| Congress chairman | Soo Teik Lee (in November 2017) |
| Chan Guk Park (present) | |
| Director and chairperson of the KSGE Task Force | Jeong-Sik Byeon |
| KSGE Task Force on Clinical Practice Guideline for EUS-guided tissue acquisition of pancreatic solid tumor | |
| Director | Se Woo Park |
| Development panel director | Se Woo Park, Moon Jae Chung |
| Development panel members | Seong-Hun Kim, Chang Min Cho, Jun-Ho Choi, Eun Kwang Choi, Tae Hoon Lee, Eunae Cho |
| Evaluation panel director | Jun Kyu Lee |
| Evaluation panel members | Tae Jun Song, Jae Min Lee, Jun Hyuk Son, Jin Suk Park, Chi Hyuk Oh |
| External evaluation panel members | Dong-Ah Park and her team |
| Collaborating societies | The Korean Society of Gastroenterology |
| Korean Pancreatobiliary Association | |
KSGE, Korean Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy; EUS, endoscopic ultrasound.
Summary and Strength of Recommendations for EUS-Guided Tissue Acquisition from Solid Pancreatic Tumors
| Statement 1: Tissue confirmation is strongly recommended in patients with solid pancreatic tumor who will undergo anti-tumor therapy such as chemotherapy or radiotherapy at the unresectable stage, including metastatic or locally advanced lesions (level of evidence: high, grade of recommendation: strong). Furthermore, tissue confirmation is also recommended at the resectable stage to exclude benign disease before surgical resection and minimize unnecessary surgeries. In addition, tissue confirmation is preferred at the borderline resectable stage for determination of appropriate neoadjuvant therapy. It may be mandatory in certain circumstances in which it is difficult to definitively diagnosis between malignancy and unusual tumors (e.g., lymphoma, some pancreatic metastases, or autoimmune pancreatitis) (level of evidence: moderate, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| Statement 2: |
| Statement 3: Because ROSE is not available in Korea, our group suggests that 4 needle passes using EUS-guided tissue acquisition may be adequate to achieve appropriate diagnosis in patients with pancreatic tumors. Pancreatic tumors less than 2 cm may require a higher number of needle passes. Furthermore, fewer needle passes might be required for the EUS-FNB procedure (level of evidence: low, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| Statement 4: Repeat EUS-guided acquisition provides a conclusive diagnosis in the majority of cases with indeterminate cytopathological diagnoses and, therefore, should be strongly recommended ahead of other modalities such as biopsy under CT-guidance or diagnostic surgical exploration (level of evidence: moderate, grade of recommendation: strong). Furthermore, K-ras mutation allows increasing diagnostic accuracy for inconclusive samples (level of evidence: low, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| Statement 5: |
| Statement 6: Diagnostic performances are most affected by preparations processing (direct smear, liquid-based cytology, cell block, and histology) and by staining techniques (Papanicolaou methods, Diff-Quik, hematoxylin and eosin, and Giemsa). Furthermore, specialized immunohistochemistry staining aids in the diagnosis of epithelial components with cytologic atypia and in differentiating various tumor cell types. The use of immunohistochemistry staining and molecular/genetic assays can enhance the value of oncological predictions and lead to tailor-made treatments (level of evidence: low, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| Statement 7: EUS-guided tissue acquisition is a safe intervention with relatively low risks of mortality (0.02%) and morbidity (0.98%). Procedure-related abdominal pain and post-procedure pancreatitis are the most common adverse events. Most unpredictable adverse events are mild in severity and self-limiting, while severe adverse events are very rare (level of evidence: moderate, grade of recommendation: strong). |
| Statement 8: In regard to EUS, the average trainee has to perform at least 225 EUS examinations with a total of 50 EUS-guided tissue acquisition procedures for achievement of competency in EUS-guided FNA or FNB (level of evidence: low, grade of recommendation: weak). |
EUS, endoscopic ultrasound; FNA, fine-needle aspiration; FNB, fine needle biopsy; KSGE, Korean Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy; ROSE, rapid on-site evaluation; CT, computed tomography.
Fig. 1Endoscopic ultrasound image of different solid pancreatic tumors (arrows). (A) Solid lesion located in the pancreatic head, corresponding to pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. (B) Pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor located in the pancreatic tail. (C) Insulinoma located in the pancreatic tail. (D) Solid pseudopapillary tumor located in the pancreatic tail. (E) Mass-forming chronic pancreatitis located in the pancreatic neck. (F) Mass-forming autoimmune pancreatitis located in the pancreatic head with bile duct obstruction.
PV, portal vein; CBD, common bile duct.
Needles Available on the Market in Korea for Use in EUS-Guided Tissue Acquisition from Solid Pancreatic Tumors18
| Manufacturer | Model | Needle type | Needle diameter (gauge) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Boston Scientific | ExpectTM Slimline (SL) | Aspiration needle | 19, 22, 25 |
| Cook | EchoTip Ultra | Aspiration needle | 19, 22, 25 |
| Olympus | EZ-shot 3 | Aspiration needle | 19, 22, 25 |
| Medi-Globe | SonoTip Pro Control | Aspiration needle | 19, 22, 25 |
| Finemedix | ClearTip | Aspiration needle | 19, 22, 25 |
EUS, endoscopic ultrasound.
*A newly marketed needle has been designed with a core trap and bevel system to increase diagnostic yield and enhance the procurement of the histologic core, while other gauge needles (19, 22, and 25 gauge) have a reversed bevel system; †A newly marketed needle has been designed with a core trap and bibevel system to increase diagnostic yield and enhance the procurement of the histologic core.
Standardized Terminology and Nomenclature for Pancreatobiliary Cytology Specimens in 201426
| Category | Nomenclature | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Category I | Non-diagnostic | A non-diagnostic cytology specimen is one that provides no diagnostic or useful information about the solid or cystic lesion sampled; for example, an acellular aspirate of a cyst without evidence of a mucinous etiology such as thick colloid-like mucus, elevated CEA or KRAS/GNAS mutation (see Category IV). Any cellular atypia precludes a non-diagnostic report. |
| Category II | Negative | A negative cytology sample is one that contains adequate cellular and/or extracellular tissue to evaluate or define a lesion that is identified on imaging. When using the negative category, one should give a specific diagnosis when practical, including: |
| Category III | Atypical | The category of atypical should only be applied when there are cells present with cytoplasmic, nuclear, or architectural features that are not consistent with normal or reactive cellular changes of the pancreas or bile ducts and are insufficient to classify them as a neoplasm or suspicious for a high-grade malignancy. The findings are insufficient to establish an abnormality explaining the lesion seen on imaging. Follow-up evaluation is warranted. |
| Category IV | Neoplastic: benign | This interpretation category connotes the presence of a cytological specimen that is sufficiently cellular and representative, with or without the context of clinical, imaging, and ancillary studies, to be diagnostic of a benign neoplasm. |
| Neoplastic: other | This interpretation category defines a neoplasm that is either premalignant such as intraductal papillary neoplasm of the bile ducts, intraductal papillary mucosal neoplasms, or mucinous cystic neoplasm with low, intermediate, or high-grade dysplasia by cytological criteria, or a low-grade malignant neoplasm such as well-differentiated primitive neuroectodermal tumor or solid-pseudopapillary neoplasm. While mucinous epithelium in biliary brushing specimens may indeed represent a neoplastic change, given the lack of evidence-based literature on the cytological interpretation, histology and management of these lesions, low-grade mucinous change of biliary epithelium will remain in the “atypical” rather than “neoplastic” category. | |
| Category V | Suspicious | A specimen is suspicious for malignancy when some, but an insufficient number of the typical features of a specific malignant neoplasm are present; mainly pancreatic adenocarcinoma. The cytological features raise a strong suspicion for malignancy, but the findings are qualitatively and/or quantitatively insufficient for a conclusive diagnosis, or tissue is not present for ancillary studies to define a specific neoplasm. The morphologic features must be sufficiently atypical that malignancy is considered more probable than not. |
| Category VI | Positive for | A group of neoplasms that unequivocally display malignant cytologic characteristics and include pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma and its variants; cholangiocarcinoma, acinar cell carcinoma, high-grade neuroendocrine carcinoma (small cell and large cell), pancreatoblastoma, lymphomas, sarcomas and metastases to the pancreas. |
CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen; KRAS, Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog; GNAS, guanine nucleotide-binding protein/α-subunit.
Specific Indicators in Immunohistochemistry Staining47
| Marker for immunohistochemistry | Target tumor |
|---|---|
| Cytokeratin (CK) | Epithelial cell tumors |
| CK 7 and 20 | Gastrointestinal tract adenocarcinoma (especially biliary tract cancer) |
| HepPar-1 | Hepatocellular carcinoma |
| CD10 | Solid pseudopapillary tumors |
| Chromogranin A | Neuroendocrine tumors |
| Trypsin | Acinar cell carcinoma |
| L26 | B cell marker |
| UCHL1 | T cell marker |
| LCA | Malignant lymphoma |
| IgG4 subtype | Autoimmune pancreatitis |
| Ziehl-Neelsen | Peripancreatic tuberculous lymphadenopathy |
Procedure-Related Adverse Events from Endoscopic Ultrasound-Guided Tissue Acquisition from Pancreatic Lesions
| Adverse event | Overall pancreatic lesions | Pancreatic solid tumors | Pancreatic cyst |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abdominal pain | 31 (0.38) | 24 (0.33) | 7 (0.77) |
| Pancreatitis | 36 (0.44) | 26 (0.36) | 10 (1.10) |
| Fever | 7 (0.08) | 4 (0.05) | 3 (0.33) |
| Bleeding | 8 (0.10) | 5 (0.07) | 3 (0.33) |
| Infection | 2 (0.02) | 0 | 2 (0.22) |
| Perforation | 1 (0.01) | 1 (0.01) | 0 |
| Bile leakage | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 85 (1.03) | 60 (0.81) | 25 (2.75) |
Data are presented as number (%).
| Tissue confirmation is strongly recommended in patients with solid pancreatic tumors who will undergo anti-tumor therapy such as chemotherapy or radiotherapy at the unresectable tumors, including metastatic or locally advanced lesions (level of evidence: high, grade of recommendation: strong). Furthermore, tissue confirmation is also recommended at the resectable tumors to exclude benign disease before surgical resection and minimize unnecessary surgeries. In addition, tissue confirmation is preferred at the borderline resectable stage for the determination of appropriate neoadjuvant therapy. It may be mandatory in certain circumstances in which it is difficult to definitively diagnose between pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma and unusual tumors (e.g., lymphoma, some pancreatic metastases, or autoimmune pancreatitis) (level of evidence: moderate, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| For routine EUS-guided tissue acquisition of pancreatic solid tumors, FNA and FNB needles are equally recommended. When the primary aim of sampling is to obtain a histologic core tissue specimen (e.g., focal autoimmune pancreatitis or neuroendocrine tumors), KSGE recommends using FNB needles (level of evidence: moderate, grade of recommendation: strong). |
| Our group suggests that no specific type or diameter of the needle has higher diagnostic accuracy than others in EUS-guided tissue acquisition for solid pancreatic tumors. However, 22-gauge needles tend to have superior outcomes compared to 19-gauge or 25-gauge needles in terms of optimal histologic core procurement and sample adequacy (level of evidence: low, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| Because ROSE is not available in Korea, our group suggests that 4 needle passes using EUS-guided tissue acquisition may be adequate to achieve appropriate diagnosis in patients with pancreatic tumors. Pancreatic tumors less than 2 cm may require a higher number of needle passes. Furthermore, fewer needle passes might be required for the EUS-FNB procedure (level of evidence: low, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| Repeat EUS-guided acquisition provides a conclusive diagnosis in the majority of cases with indeterminate cytopathological diagnoses and, therefore, should be strongly recommended ahead of other modalities, such as biopsy under computed tomography-guidance or diagnostic surgical exploration (level of evidence: moderate, grade of recommendation: strong). Furthermore, the K-ras mutation can be an available option to increase the diagnostic accuracy for inconclusive samples (level of evidence: low, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| Our group suggests that routine application of ROSE cannot guarantee an improvement in diagnostic accuracy and performance in terms of sensitivity and specificity. Nevertheless, application of ROSE is expected to achieve higher per-case accuracy than non-application (level of evidence: low, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| The use of a stylet during EUS-guided tissue acquisition does not appear to guarantee any advantages with regards to the adequacy of the specimen, diagnostic yield, nor regarding prevention of needle clogging by gut wall tissue (level of evidence: moderate, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| Our group suggests that routine application of suction is recommended in cases where cellularity is poor, such as fibrotic lesions in chronic pancreatitis, whereas it is discouraged in non-fibrotic lesions which may contain necrosis and blood to minimize contamination of the cellular sample (level of evidence: moderate, grade of recommendation: weak). Also, the slow-pull-back technique may be more effective in terms of adequate tissue acquisition and require fewer needle passes for solid pancreatic tumors (level of evidence: low, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| Our group suggests that the fanning technique for EUS-guided tissue acquisition offers technically acceptable feasibility and superior diagnostic outcomes, including fewer needle passes required to establish the definite diagnosis, than the standard technique (level of evidence: moderate, grade of recommendation: strong). Furthermore, the torque technique, similar to the fanning technique, also showed better outcomes regarding optimal histologic core procurement and diagnostic accuracy in comparison with the standard technique (level of evidence: low, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| Diagnostic performances are most affected by preparation processing (direct smear, liquid-based cytology [LBC], cell block, and histology) and by staining techniques (Papanicolaou methods, Diff-Quik, hematoxylin and eosin, and Giemsa). Furthermore, specialized immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining aids in the diagnosis of epithelial components with cytologic atypia and in differentiating various tumor cell types. The use of IHC staining and molecular/genetic assays can enhance the value of oncological predictions and lead to tailor-made treatments (level of evidence: low, grade of recommendation: weak). |
| EUS-guided tissue acquisition is a safe intervention with relatively low risks of mortality (0.02%) and morbidity (0.98%). Procedure-related abdominal pain and post-procedure pancreatitis are the most common adverse events. Most unpredictable adverse events are mild in severity and self-limiting, while severe adverse events are very rare (level of evidence: moderate, grade of recommendation: strong). |
| In regard to EUS, the average trainee has to perform at least 225 EUS examinations with a total of 50 EUS-guided tissue acquisition procedures for the achievement of competency in EUS-guided FNA or FNB (level of evidence: low, grade of recommendation: weak). |