• La Radiologia medica · Oct 2013

    Predictive factors of diagnostic accuracy of CT-guided transthoracic fine-needle aspiration for solid noncalcified, subsolid and mixed pulmonary nodules.

    • Massimo De Filippo, Luca Saba, Giorgio Concari, Rita Nizzoli, Lilia Ferrari, Marcello Tiseo, Andrea Ardizzoni, Nicola Sverzellati, Ilaria Paladini, Chiara Ganazzoli, Luca Maria Sconfienza, Giampaolo Carrafiello, Luca Brunese, Eugenio Annibale Genovese, Luca Ampollini, Paolo Carbognani, Michele Rusca, Maurizio Zompatori, and Cristina Rossi.
    • Radiology Unit, University of Parma, Parma Hospital, Via Gramsci 14, 43100, Parma, Italy, massimo.defilippo@unipr.it.
    • Radiol Med. 2013 Oct 1; 118 (7): 1071-81.

    PurposeThe aim of this study was to analyse factors predicting the diagnostic accuracy of computed tomography (CT)-guided transthoracic fine-needle aspiration (TTFNA) for solid noncalcified, subsolid and mixed pulmonary nodules, with particular attention to those responsible for false negative results with a view to suggesting a method for their correction.Materials And MethodsFrom January 2007 to March 2010, we retrospectively reviewed the CT images of 198 patients of both sexes (124 males and 74 females; mean age, 70 years; range age, 44-90) used for the guidance of TTFNA of pulmonary nodules. Aspects considered were: lesion size and density, distance from the pleura, and lesion site. Multiplanar reformatted images (MPR) were retrospectively obtained in the sagittal and axial oblique planes relative to needle orientation.ResultsThe overall diagnostic accuracy of TTFNA CT-guided biopsy was 86% for nodules between 0.7 and 3 cm, 83.3% for those between 0.7 and 1.5 cm, and 92% for those between 2 and 3 cm. Accuracy was 95.1% for solid pulmonary nodules, 84.6% for mixed nodules, and 66.6% for subsolid nodules. The diagnostic accuracy of CT-guided TTFNA in relation to the distance between the nodule and the pleural plane was 95.6% for lesions adhering to the pleura and 83.5% for central ones. The diagnostic accuracy was 84.2% for the pulmonary upper lobe nodules, 85.3% for the lower lobe and 90.9% for those in the lingula and middle lobe. In 75% of false negative and inadequate/insufficient cases the needle was found to lie outside the lesion, after reconstruction of the needle path by MPR.ConclusionsThe positive predictive factors of CT-guided TTFNA are related to the nodule size, density and distance from the pleural plane. The most common negative predictive factor of CT-guided TTFNA is the wrong position of the needle tip, as observed in the sagittal and axial oblique sections of the MPR reconstructions. The diagnostic accuracy of CT-guided TTFNA can therefore be improved by using the MPR technique to plan the needle path during the FNA procedure.

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