The objective of this study is to investigate the efficacy and safety of flexible transbronchial cryobiopsy (TBCB) in the diagnosis of diffuse parenchymal lung disease (DPLD) in a routine bronchoscopy examination room under analgesia and sedation, using neither endotracheal intubation or rigid bronchoscope nor fluoroscopy or general anesthesia. The data from 50 DPLD patients with unknown etiology who were treated in the Affiliated Hospital of Guilin Medical College from May 2018 to September 2020 were collected, and 43 were eventually included. The specimens obtained from these 43 patients were subjected to pathological examination, pathogenic microorganism culture, etc, and were analyzed in the clinical-radiological-pathological diagnosis mode to confirm the efficacy of TBCB in diagnosing the cause of DPLD. Subsequently, the intraoperative and postoperative complications of TBCB and their severity were closely observed and recorded to comprehensively evaluate the safety of TBCB. For the 43 patients included, a total of 85 TBCB biopsies were performed (1.98 [1, 4] times/case), and 82 valid tissue specimens were obtained (1.91 [1, 4] pieces/case), accounting for 96.5% (82/85) of the total sample. The average specimen size was 12.41 (1, 30) mm2. Eventually, 38 cases were diagnosed, including 11 cases of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, 5 cases of connective tissue-related interstitial lung disease, 5 cases of nonspecific interstitial pneumonia, 4 cases of tuberculosis, 4 cases of occupational lung injury, 3 cases of interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune characteristics, 1 case of lung cancer, 2 cases of interstitial lung disease (unclassified interstitial lung disease), 1 case of hypersensitivity pneumonitis, 1 case of pulmonary alveolar proteinosis, and 1 case of fungal infection. The remaining 5 cases were unclarified. For infectious diseases, the overall etiological diagnosis rate was 88.4% (38/43). With respect to complications, pneumothorax occurred in 4 cases (9.3%, 4/43, including 1 mild case and 3 moderate cases), of which 3 cases (75%) were closed by thoracic drainage and 1 case (25%) was absorbed without treatment. In addition, 22 cases experienced no bleeding (51.2%) and 21 cases suffered bleeding to varying degrees based on different severity assessment methods. TBCB is a minimally invasive, rapid, economical, effective, and safe diagnostic technique.
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