Abstract

Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) guided fine needle aspiration (FNA) has a crucial role in the diagnosis of solid pancreatic lesions and rapid on-site evaluation (ROSE) can increase its diagnostic yield. Rapid on-site evaluation is not always available and after EUS-FNA provides a cytology specimen with scant cellularity. Fine needle biopsy (FNB) specimens containing core tissue may theoretically overcome the limitations of EUS-FNA sampling. It could be hypothesized that EUS-FNB without ROSE could achieve the same adequacy and accuracy of EUS-FNB with ROSE. The aim of this review is to evaluate the evidence on the role of ROSE in the setting of EUS-guided tissue acquisition with core needles in patients with solid pancreatic lesions. All relevant articles were extracted up to February 2017 based on the results of searches in PubMed, Scopus and Google Scholar. A total of 21 pertinent articles were finally included. Among the included studies, 11 were performed without ROSE, 8 with ROSE, and 2 were performed both with and without ROSE. In the ROSE group we found a sensitivity, specificity, overall diagnostic adequacy and overall diagnostic accuracy of 96%, 100%, 86.5%, 85.5%, respectively, while in the no-ROSE group 86.6%, 100%, 89.5%, 86.1% were found, respectively. Mild pancreatitis (mean rates, 3.43%) and abdominal pain (mean rates, 3.6%) were reported as most frequent adverse events. Endoscopic ultrasound guided-FNB without ROSE offers similar results in terms of adequacy and accuracy as in the presence of an on-site cytopathologist.

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