Chest
Volume 122, Issue 6, December 2002, Pages 1887-1894
Journal home page for Chest

Clinical Investigations: Techniques
Analysis of the Internal Structure of Peripheral Pulmonary Lesions Using Endobronchial Ultrasonography

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Study objective

To correlate the internal structure of peripheral pulmonary lesions, as visualized by endobronchial ultrasonography (EBUS), and the histology of the surgical specimen to develop a classification system for distinguishing benign from malignant lesions by EBUS.

Design

Retrospective review.

Setting

A national hospital.

Patients

One hundred twenty-four patients with peripheral pulmonary lesions who had undergone EBUS in whom a definitive histologic diagnosis was made. In 69 patients, EBUS findings were correlated with the histology of a surgical specimen.

Intervention

EBUS was performed by a miniature probe (20-MHz) introduced up to the lesion through a channel in a bronchoscope.

Results

Three classes and six subclasses of lesions were identified by EBUS based on the internal structure of the lesion, focusing on internal echoes, vascular and bronchial patency, and the morphology of the hyperechoic areas, reflecting air in the alveoli and bronchioles. The classes of lesions are as follows: type I, homogeneous pattern (type Ia, with patent vessels and patent bronchioles; type Ib, without vessels and bronchioles); type II, hyperechoic dots and linear arcs pattern (type IIa, without vessels; type IIb, with patent vessels); and type III, heterogeneous pattern (type IIIa, with hyperechoic dots and short lines; type IIIb, without hyperechoic dots and short lines). Twenty-three of 25 type I lesions (92.0%) were benign, while 98 of 99 type II and III lesions (99.0%) were malignant. Twenty-one of 24 type II lesions (87.5%) were well-differentiated adenocarcinomas, and all type IIIb lesions were malignant, including 18 poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas (81.8%).

Conclusions

EBUS permits the visualization of the internal structure of peripheral pulmonary lesions, and this information suggests the histology of the lesion.

Section snippets

Correlation Between Preoperative EBUS Images and the Histopathology of Peripheral Pulmonary Lesions

The records of 69 patients who underwent diagnostic preoperative EBUS for a peripheral lesion between January 1996 and December 2000 and whose surgical specimens could be sectioned were reviewed. The histopathologic findings were correlated with the internal structure of the lesions, as visualized by EBUS.

Typing the Internal Structure of 124 Lesions Visualized by EBUS

One hundred sixty-eight patients with peripheral pulmonary lesions underwent EBUS between January 1997 and December 2000, and EBUS was able to visualize the lesion in 143 patients (85.1%). Of

Correlation Between EBUS Images and the Histopathology

The data from the 69 patients in whom preoperative EBUS images could be correlated with the histopathologic findings of surgical specimens were available for analysis (Table 1).

Of the 18 cases of well-differentiated adenocarcinoma, EBUS showed the preservation of blood vessels within the lesion in 7 (Fig 2). The lesions in these cases had homogeneous internal echoes overall, but some hyperechoic dots (ie, < 1 mm in size) also were observed, which reflected the presence of residual air in the

Discussion

EBUS uses high-frequency ultrasound (20 MHz) to create detailed images of the internal structures of lesions, although it cannot image tissue that is external to the lesion. Endoscopic ultrasonography has been used to examine the internal structure of pancreatic lesions, and the results have been correlated with histopathology in cases of cystic tumors, calcifications, and pancreatic stones.10,11 Some investigators have reported that dynamic MRI provides information on enhanced patterns of

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