| Literature DB >> 35741158 |
Maciej Stukan1,2, Piotr Rutkowski3, Jeremy Smadja4, Sylvie Bonvalot5.
Abstract
Uterine sarcomas are rare, aggressive tumors with poor prognosis that can be further negatively affected by inadequate surgical approaches such as morcellation. There are no clinical and radiologic criteria for differentiating leiomyoma from malignant uterine tumors. However, some ultrasonography and magnetic resonance imaging findings may be informative. We present a technique of ultrasound-guided trans-uterine cavity (UG-TUC) core needle biopsy for uterine lesions. As the procedure is an in-organ biopsy, there is no risk of needle canal contamination. The technique also enables the biopsy of lesions inaccessible by the transvaginal tru-cut biopsy. The core needle of the automatic biopsy system is inserted via the cervical canal into the uterine cavity and is directed and activated at the myometrial lesion under ultrasound control. The standard local treatment of localized uterine sarcomas is en bloc total hysterectomy; for fibroids, there are multiple options including conservative management or tumorectomy and tumor morcellation using minimally invasive techniques. Fragmentation of the sarcoma significantly worsens oncologic outcomes and should therefore be avoided. The UG-TUC core needle biopsy of uterine lesions can complement imaging to obtain sufficient material for histologic and molecular analyses of suspected or undetermined lesions, thus facilitating treatment planning and decreasing the risk of unsuspected sarcomas.Entities:
Keywords: core needle biopsy; diagnosis; differential; leiomyoma; preoperative; sarcoma; technique; tru-cut biopsy; ultrasound; uterus
Year: 2022 PMID: 35741158 PMCID: PMC9222075 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12061348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1Schematic illustration of UG-TUC core needle biopsy of myometrial lesions. The biopsy needle is inserted into the uterine cavity (in-organ biopsy) and the lesion is targeted by ultrasonography. Either a transabdominal (with a convex probe) or transrectal (e.g., even with a transvaginal probe) approach—whichever provides better visualization—can be used.
Figure 2Transvaginal ultrasonogram of the uterus in a patient. Red arrows indicate a lesion in the myometrium in the uterine doom; blue arrows indicate the uterine corpus; and the yellow arrow indicates an intrauterine device.
Figure 3Transabdominal ultrasonogram of the uterus and core needle biopsy of the uterine lesion. The red arrows indicate the uterine lesion (in the uterine doom myometrium); blue arrows indicate the uterine corpus; the green arrow indicates the automatic biopsy system in the uterine cavity. The core needle is activated into the uterine myometrium lesion.
Case series where ultrasonography of uterine lesions was supplemented by core needle biopsy. Clinical, sonological and histological data are provided, together with clinical significance of addition of core needle biopsy to ultrasonography.
| Case | Ultrasound | Figure | Initial Treatment/ | Initial Patient’s Willingness to Undergo | Histology from Core Needle Biopsy | Patient | Histology from Definitive Surgery | Did Core | Did Core |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (44) | Typical uterine lesion (myoma) |
| No | Yes | Leiomyoma, cellular variant ( | Yes (lesion enlarged during | Leiomyoma, cellular variant | No | Yes |
| 2 (36) | Sarcoma suspicion |
| Yes | Tumorectomy, uterus preservation (young age) | LMS | Yes | LMS | No | Yes |
| 3 (37) | Atypical uterine lesion |
| Yes | No | Lipoleiomyoma | No | - | Yes | Yes |
| 4 (56) | Atypical uterine lesion |
| Yes | Yes | Leiomyoma ( | Yes | Leiomyoma and adenomyosis | Yes | No |
| 5 (50) | Atypical uterine lesion (metastatic adenocarcinoma |
| Yes | No | Leiomyoma | No | Uterus / tumor not resected because | Yes | Yes |
| 6 (38) | Atypical uterine lesion |
| Yes | No | Leiomyoma, epithelioid variant | Yes (lesion enlarged during follow-up) | Leiomyoma, epithelioid variant | Yes | Yes |
| 7 (29) | Atypical uterine lesion |
| Yes | Yes | Leiomyoma ( | Yes | Leiomyoma with signs of | Yes | Yes |
| 8 (52) | Atypical uterine lesion |
| Yes | Yes | Total abdominal hysterectomy performed without core need biopsy, because of patients age and lesion ultrasound pattern recognition. | Yes | STUMP | - | - |
LMS, leiomyosarcoma; STUMP, smooth muscle tumor of uncertain malignant potential; UG-TUC, ultrasound-guided transuterine cavity; Note. There were no complications concerned with UG-TUC core needle biopsy procedure.