Abstract

Small pulmonary nodules (≤1.5 cm) are frequently detected on routine chest imaging and lung cancer screening studies. Our goal was to determine the clinical value of CT-guided core needle biopsy (CNB) in the evaluation of such nodules. In this single-center study, we retrospectively analyzed patient data (n = 44) for CNBs on lung nodules (≤1.5 cm) performed at our biopsy center between May 2017 and March 2020. We analyzed for the rate of pathology diagnosis, molecular/biomarker analysis, complications, and change in clinical management and outcome over a period ranging up to 60 months after biopsy. A pathology diagnosis of malignancy or benign lesion was obtained in 97.9% of biopsies in this cohort. The rate of complications was low with only 6.8% of patients requiring the insertion of a temporary small profile interventional radiology (IR) pigtail chest tube for pneumothorax. Out of the subset of biopsy specimens that were sent for tissue molecular analysis, 90% had enough tissue preserved after initial pathological analysis to obtain at least one molecular marker. Our data show that CT-guided CNB is safe and reliable, and should be considered for the evaluation of small, suspicious lung nodules found on routine screenings for the early detection and evaluation of malignant lesions.

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