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WET-SUCTION VERSUS SLOW-PULL TECHNIQUE FOR ENDOSCOPIC ULTRASOUND-GUIDED FINE-NEEDLE BIOPSY: A MULTICENTER, RANDOMIZED, CROSS-OVER TRIAL

Authors :
Stefano Francesco Crinò
Maria Cristina Conti Bellocchi
Roberto Di Mitri
Frediano Inzani
Mihai Rimbaș
Andrea Lisotti
Guido Manfredi
Anthony Y. B. Teoh
Benedetto Mangiavillano
Oriol Sendino
Laura Bernardoni
Erminia Manfrin
Daniela Scimeca
Elettra Unti
Angela Carlino
Theodor Voiosu
R. Bogdan Mateescu
Pietro Fusaroli
Stefania Lega
Elisabetta Buscarini
Lorena Pergola
Shannon M. Chan
Laura Lamonaca
Àngels Ginès
Gloria Fernández-Esparrach
Antonio Facciorusso
Alberto Larghi
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background It is unknown whether there is an advantage to using the wet-suction or slow-pull technique during endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine-needle biopsy (EUS-FNB) with new-generation needles. We aimed to compare the performance of each technique in EUS-FNB. Methods This was a multicenter, randomized, single-blind, crossover trial including patients with solid lesions of ≥ 1 cm. Four needle passes with 22 G fork-tip or Franseen-type needles were performed, alternating the wet-suction and slow-pull techniques in a randomized order. The primary outcome was the histological yield (samples containing an intact piece of tissue of at least 550 μm). Secondary end points were sample quality (tissue integrity and blood contamination), diagnostic accuracy, and adequate tumor fraction. Results Overall, 210 patients with 146 pancreatic and 64 nonpancreatic lesions were analyzed. A tissue core was retrieved in 150 (71.4 %) and 129 (61.4 %) cases using the wet-suction and the slow-pull techniques, respectively (P = 0.03). The mean tissue integrity score was higher using wet suction (P = 0.02), as was the blood contamination of samples (P Conclusion Overall, the wet-suction technique in EUS-FNB resulted in a higher tissue core procurement rate compared with the slow-pull method. Diagnostic accuracy and the rate of samples with adequate tumor fraction were similar between the two techniques.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....38414ecd5bb9f660668331eb789a8f3d