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https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/5048961
Title: | Diagnosis of Peripheral Lung Lesions via Conventional Flexible Bronchoscopy with Multiplanar CT Planning | Authors: | De Roza, M.A Quah, K.H Tay, C.K Toh, W Li, H Kalyanasundaram, G Anantham, D |
Keywords: | adult aged Article bronchoscopy clinical trial (topic) computer assisted tomography diagnostic test accuracy study diagnostic value female flexible bronchoscope flexible bronchoscope biopsy forceps human human tissue hypoxia lung adenocarcinoma lung cancer lung hemorrhage lung infection lung metastasis lung tuberculosis major clinical study male non small cell lung cancer patient safety patient selection peripheral lung lesion pneumothorax prospective study sensitivity and specificity squamous cell lung carcinoma thorax radiography transthoracic aspiration adverse effects diagnostic imaging differential diagnosis fine needle aspiration biopsy image processing lung Lung Neoplasms middle aged pathology patient care planning procedures Singapore x-ray computed tomography Biopsy, Fine-Needle Bronchoscopy Diagnosis, Differential Female Humans Image Processing, Computer-Assisted Lung Lung Neoplasms Male Middle Aged Patient Care Planning Patient Selection Prospective Studies Sensitivity and Specificity Singapore Tomography, X-Ray Computed |
Issue Date: | 2016 | Citation: | De Roza, M.A, Quah, K.H, Tay, C.K, Toh, W, Li, H, Kalyanasundaram, G, Anantham, D (2016). Diagnosis of Peripheral Lung Lesions via Conventional Flexible Bronchoscopy with Multiplanar CT Planning. Pulmonary Medicine 2016 : 5048961. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/5048961 | Rights: | Attribution 4.0 International | Abstract: | Background. Conventional flexible bronchoscopy has limited sensitivity in the diagnosis of peripheral lung lesions and is dependent on lesion size. However, advancement of CT imaging offers multiplanar reconstruction facilitating enhanced preprocedure planning. This study aims to report efficacy and safety while considering the impact of patient selection and multiplanar CT planning. Method. Prospective case series of patients with peripheral lung lesions suspected of having lung cancer who underwent flexible bronchoscopy (forceps biopsy and lavage). Endobronchial lesions were excluded. Patients with negative results underwent CT-guided transthoracic needle aspiration, surgical biopsy, or clinical-radiological surveillance to establish the final diagnosis. Results. 226 patients were analysed. The diagnostic yield of bronchoscopy was 80.1% (181/226) with a sensitivity of 84.2% and specificity of 100%. In patients with a positive CT-Bronchus sign, the diagnostic yield was 82.4% compared to 72.8% with negative CT-Bronchus sign (p=0.116). Diagnostic yield was 84.9% in lesions > 20 mm and 63.0% in lesions ≤ 20 mm (p=0.001). Six (2.7%) patients had transient hypoxia and 2 (0.9%) had pneumothorax. There were no serious adverse events. Conclusion. Flexible bronchoscopy with appropriate patient selection and preprocedure planning is more efficacious in obtaining a diagnosis in peripheral lung lesions compared to historical data. © 2016 Marianne Anastasia De Roza et al. | Source Title: | Pulmonary Medicine | URI: | https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/183366 | ISSN: | 20901836 | DOI: | 10.1155/2016/5048961 | Rights: | Attribution 4.0 International |
Appears in Collections: | Staff Publications Elements |
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