Connect Your Needle to Your Phone to Increase EUS FNA Diagnostic Yield? (SMARTEUS)
Pancreatic Neoplasms
About this trial
This is an interventional diagnostic trial for Pancreatic Neoplasms
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- a solid pancreatic lesion with diameter larger than 20mm, with or without a cystic component, with unknown histology;
- age above 18 years old;
- signed informed consent;
Exclusion Criteria:
- a solid pancreatic mass with a diameter less than 20mm or with known histology;
- a cystic pancreatic mass, without a solid component;
- coagulation disorder (international normalized ratio above 1.5, activated partial thromboplastin time above 42 seconds, platelet count less than 60000/mmc) or impossibility to stop antiaggregants or anticoagulants according to the European Society of Digestive Endoscopy guidelines;
- European Cooperative Oncology Group status 4;
- American Society of Anesthesiology score higher than 3;
- pregnant women;
- age under 18 years old;
- refusal or impossibility to sign informed consent.
Sites / Locations
- "Prof. Dr. Agrippa Ionescu" Clinical and Emerency Hospital
- Floreasca Emergency Hospital
- Colentina Clinical Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Experimental
Fast Pass First, Slow Pass Second
Slow Pass First - Fast Pass Second
Each patient will receive 2 EUS FNA passes, 1 "fast" and 1 "slow", with a 22 gauge EUS needle, with suction syringe, employing the fanning technique, 10 jabs for each pass. A "fast" pass has an advancing mean acceleration jab ("to" movement) higher than 1 g, while a "slow" pass has an advancing mean acceleration jab of less than 1 g (where 1 g equals 9.8 m/s2). Both movements will have a "slow" "fro" withdrawal movement, from the point of maximum advance into the lesion to the lesion entry site. For each patient, the passes order with be either done as "fast" pass first, "slow" pass second.
Each patient will receive 2 EUS FNA passes, 1 "fast" and 1 "slow", with a 22 gauge EUS needle, with suction syringe, employing the fanning technique, 10 jabs for each pass. A "fast" pass has an advancing mean acceleration jab ("to" movement) higher than 1 g, while a "slow" pass has an advancing mean acceleration jab of less than 1 g (where 1 g equals 9.8 m/s2). Both movements will have a "slow" "fro" withdrawal movement, from the point of maximum advance into the lesion to the lesion entry site. For each patient, the passes order with be either done as "slow" pass first, "fast" pass second.