Abstract
Peripheral pulmonary lesions (PPLs) are frequently identified and require diagnostic sampling. Diagnostic yield of radial endobronchial ultrasound (rEBUS) guided bronchoscopic biopsies is suboptimal, despite ultrasound confirmation of navigation success. Pairing ultrathin bronchoscopy and peripheral transbronchial needle aspiration (pTBNA) may improve yield. We prospectively recruited consecutive patients undergoing Olympus MP190F ultrathin bronchoscopy with rEBUS-guided sampling of PPLs. Cases were randomized to pTBNA (Olympus Periview FLEX) either before or after the usual transbronchial forceps biopsy (TBLBx) and brush. Diagnostic yield from cytology or histopathology, clinical outcomes to a minimum 24 months follow-up and complications were recorded. One hundred one sampled lesions were included (pTBNA first 61, pTBNA last 40). Overall diagnostic yield was 66.3%, with no significant difference between groups (64% vs. 70% P=0.528) or prespecified subgroups according to sampling order. Seventy lesions had an end diagnosis of malignancy, of which 50 were correctly diagnosed (71.4%). TBLBx (49/96, 49%) and pTBNA (48/101, 47.5%) had the highest individual positive yield. For 12 (11.9%) participants, pTBNA was the only positive sample. Lesions <20mm and those with eccentric rEBUS image seemed to benefit most from this approach. Rapid on-site cytologic examination (ROSE) was associated with both positive procedural diagnosis (P=0.019) and pTBNA-positive samples (P=0.004). Pneumothorax occurred in 4% and moderate bleeding in 5%. Thirteen percent had an unplanned admission within 1 month of bronchoscopy. Adding pTBNA to conventional sampling through an ultrathin bronchoscope guided by rEBUS, improved diagnostic yield (11.9% additional diagnoses). The sampling sequence did not affect the yield of pTBNA.
Published Version
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