Abstract
Whilst excision biopsy is traditionally preferred, advances in radiological and histological techniques warrant a re-look at core biopsy as a viable primary diagnostic method. Over a 3-year period, all patients who underwent core biopsy to investigate lymphoma at our centre were included. 554 consecutive patients were included (40.1% prior lymphoma and 59.4% new presentations). Three or more cores were taken in 420 (75.8%) cases. Median time from request to biopsy and biopsy to histology report was 2 (0-40) days and 7 (1-24) days, respectively. 510/544 (93.8%) biopsies were diagnostic. There was no difference in whether the biopsy was diagnostic based on indication (new vs. relapsed lymphoma) (P=.445), whether biopsy was PET-directed (P=.507), for T-cell lymphoma (P=.468) or nodal vs. extra-nodal (P=.693). Thirty-eight patients (6.9%) required a second biopsy due to inadequate tissue. In a patient experience survey, only 13.9% reported any complications (1 self-limiting minor bleeding, 4 bruising) whilst 16.7% reported any discomfort beyond 12hours. Core biopsy performed by experienced radiologists and analysed by expert haemato-pathologists is a reliable, well-tolerated method for diagnosing lymphoma and confirming relapse. Multiple cores can be obtained under local anaesthetic yielding sufficient material in the majority of cases.
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