Review
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2015.
World J Gastroenterol. Nov 28, 2015; 21(44): 12544-12557
Published online Nov 28, 2015. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v21.i44.12544
Table 1 Reported diagnostic yields of endoscopic ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration of hepatic solitary lesions
Ref.Patient number/lesion sampledDiagnostic yields
Nguyen et al[6]574/15CT before EUS depicted liver lesions in 3 of the 14 patients (21%)
Awad et al[14]14/9EUS identified additional lesions in 28% of the patients and changed clinical management in 67% of the patients
TenBerge et al[15]167/167EUS-FNA diagnosed malignancy in 89% of cases after non diagnostic FNA under trans abdominal US guidance
DeWitt et al[16]77/7745 (58%) were diagnostic for malignancy, 25 (33%) were benign and seven (9%) were non diagnostic. EUS detected malignancy in 41% of patients with previously negative exam
HollerBach et al[17]41/41With combination of histological and cytological examination sensitivity and specificity for detecting malignancy was 94% and 100%
Prasad et al[13]222/21Diagnostic of malignancy in 15 (6.8%) 5 of whom (2.3%) had normal imaging prior
Crowe et al[21]50/16Diagnostic of malignancy in 56% of the cases, comparable to CT scan
McGrath et al[105]98/5The sensitivity of EUS-FNA for liver lesions was 80%. These lesions were not evident on prior noninvasive imaging
Singh et al[106]132/26The diagnostic accuracy of EUS/EUS-FNA and CT scan was 98% and 92% respectively