Comparative diagnostic performance of different techniques for EUS-guided fine-needle biopsy sampling of solid pancreatic masses: a network meta-analysis - 18/04/23
Abstract |
Background and Aims |
Evidence is limited on the comparative diagnostic performance of tissue sampling techniques for EUS-guided fine-needle biopsy sampling of pancreatic masses. We performed a systematic review with network meta-analysis to compare these techniques.
Methods |
Rates of sample adequacy, blood contamination, and tissue integrity using fine-needle biopsy sampling needles were evaluated. Direct and indirect comparisons were performed among the slow-pull, dry-suction, modified wet-suction, or no-suction techniques. Results are expressed as risk ratio (RR) and 95% confidence interval (CI).
Results |
Overall, 9 randomized controlled trials (756 patients) were identified. On network meta-analysis, the no-suction technique was significantly inferior to the other techniques (RR, .85 [95% CI, .78-.92] vs slow pull; RR, .85 [95% CI, .78-.92] vs dry suction; RR, .83 [95% CI, .76-.90] vs modified wet suction) in terms of sample adequacy. Consequently, modified wet suction was shown to be the best technique (surface under the cumulative ranking curve score, .90), with the no-suction technique showing poorer performance in terms of sample adequacy (surface under the cumulative ranking curve score, .14). Dry suction was associated with significantly higher rates of blood contamination as compared with the slow-pull technique (RR, 1.44; 95% CI, 1.15-1.80), whereas no suction led to less blood contamination of samples in comparison with other techniques (RR, .71 [95% CI, .52-.97] vs slow pull; RR, .49 [95% CI, .36-.66] vs dry suction; RR, .57 [95% CI, .40-.81] vs modified wet suction). The modified wet-suction technique significantly outperformed dry suction in terms of tissue integrity of the sample (RR, 1.36; 95% CI, 1.06-1.75).
Conclusions |
Modified wet suction seemed to provide high rates of integrity and adequate samples, albeit with high blood contamination. The no-suction technique performed significantly worse than other sampling strategies.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Abbreviations : CI, EUS-FNA, EUS-FNB, GRADE, RCT, ROSE, RR, SUCRA
Plan
| DISCLOSURE: The following authors disclosed financial relationships: S. F. Crinò: Consultant for Steris Endoscopy. A. Fugazza: Consultant for Boston Scientific. S. Carrara: Consultant for Olympus. B. Mangiavillano: Consultant for Taewoong Medical. C. Hassan: Consultant for MicroTech and Boston Scientific. A. Repici: Consultant for Boston Scientific and Medtronic; grant support from Fujifilm. All other authors disclosed no financial relationships. |
Vol 97 - N° 5
P. 839 - mai 2023 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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