Publication | Closed Access
Transcutaneous Needle Aspiration of Solitary Pulmonary Masses: How Many Passes?
26
Citations
4
References
1987
Year
Surgical OncologyInterventional PulmonologyLung MassesPathologySurgerySeparate AspirationsOncologyPneumothoraxSurgical PathologyRadiologyPulmonary CirculationPulmonary MedicinePulmonary BlastomaLung CancerFiberoptic BronchoscopySolitary Pulmonary MassesMultiple Pulmonary NoduleBronchial NeoplasmThoracic SurgeryMedicine
In 46 consecutive patients undergoing transcutaneous needle aspiration of the lung, we evaluated the number of passes required to reliably predict the presence of malignancy. A diagnosis of malignancy was made in 38 of the 46 patients (84%), none of whom required more than 6 separate aspirations for a positive cytologic diagnosis to be made. The remaining 8 patients with a nonmalignant cytologic diagnosis on 6 separate aspirations were subsequently shown to have a benign lesion, either by surgical excision (5 patients), fiberoptic bronchoscopy (2 patients), or clinical follow-up (1 patient). Pneumothorax occurred in 12 of 46 patients (26%). We confirm that TCNA is a safe and reliable procedure in the valuation of lung masses and that, when adequate cellular material is obtained, 6 separate aspirations reliably predict the presence of malignancy.
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