- van Riet, Priscilla A
- Cahen, Djuna L
- Biermann, Katharina
- Hansen, Bettina
- Larghi, Alberto
- Rindi, Guido
- Fellegara, Giovanni
- Arcidiacono, Paolo
- Doglioni, Claudio
- Liberta Decarli, Nicola
- Iglesias-Garcia, Julio
- Abdulkader, Ihab
- Lazare Iglesias, Hector
- Kitano, Masayuki
- Chikugo, Takaaki
- Yasukawa, Satoru
- van der Valk, Hans
- Nguyen, Nam Quoc
- Ruszkiewicz, Andrew
- Giovannini, Marc
- Poizat, Flora
- van der Merwe, Schalk
- Roskams, Tania
- Santo, Erwin
- Marmor, Silvia
- Chang, Kenneth
- Lin, Fritz
- Farrell, James
- Robert, Marie
- Bucobo, Juan Carlos
- Heimann, Alan
- Baldaque-Silva, Francisco
- Fernández Moro, Carlos
- Bruno, Marco J
- et al.
Background and aim
A recently carried out randomized controlled trial showed the benefit of a novel 20-G fine-needle biopsy (FNB) over a 25-G fine-needle aspiration (FNA) needle. The current study evaluated the reproducibility of these findings among expert academic and non-academic pathologists.Methods
This study was a side-study of the ASPRO (ASpiration versus PROcore) study. Five centers retrieved 74 (59%) consecutive FNB and 51 (41%) FNA samples from the ASPRO study according to randomization; 64 (51%) pancreatic and 61 (49%) lymph node specimens. Samples were re-reviewed by five expert academic and five non-academic pathologists and rated in terms of sample quality and diagnosis. Ratings were compared between needles, expert academic and non-academic pathologists, target lesions, and cytology versus histological specimens.Results
Besides a higher diagnostic accuracy, FNB also provided for a better agreement on diagnosing malignancy (ĸ = 0.59 vs ĸ = 0.76, P < 0.001) and classification according to Bethesda (ĸ = 0.45 vs ĸ = 0.61, P < 0.001). This equally applied for expert academic and non-academic pathologists and for pancreatic and lymph node specimens. Sample quality was also rated higher for FNB, but agreement ranged from poor (ĸ = 0.04) to fair (ĸ = 0.55). Histology provided better agreement than cytology, but only when a core specimen was obtained with FNB (P = 0.004 vs P = 0.432).Conclusion
This study shows that the 20-G FNB outperforms the 25-G FNA needle in terms of diagnostic agreement, independent of the background and experience of the pathologist. This endorses use of the 20-G FNB needle in both expert and lower volume EUS centers.