Background Single-use flexible bronchoscopes eliminate cross contamination from reusable bronchoscopes and are cost-effective in a number of clinical settings. The present bench study aimed to compare the performance of a new single-use bronchoscope (Boston Scientific EXALT Model B) to a marketed single-use comparator (Ambu aScope 4), each in slim, regular and large diameters. Methods Three bronchoscopy tasks were performed: water suction and visualization, “mucus” mass (synthetic mucoid mixture) suctioned in 30 s, and “mucus” plug (thicker mucoid mixture) suction. Suction ability, task completion times, and subjective ratings of visualization and overall performance on a scale of one to 10 (best) were compared. All bronchoscopy tasks were completed by 15 physicians representing diversity in specialization including pulmonary, interventional pulmonary, critical care, anesthesia, and thoracic surgery. Each physician utilized the six bronchoscope versions with block randomization by bronchoscope and task. Results Aspirated mean mass of “mucus” using EXALT Model B Regular was comparable to that for an aScope 4 Large (41.8 ± 8.3 g vs. 41.5 ± 5.7 g respectively, p = 0.914). In comparisons of scopes with the same outer diameter, the aspirated mean mass by weight of water and “mucus” was significantly greater for EXALT Model B than for aScope 4 (p < 0.001 for all three diameters). Mean ratings for visualization attributes were significantly better for EXALT Model B compared to aScope 4 (p-value range 0.001−0.029). Conclusion A new single-use bronchoscope provided strong suction capability and visualization compared to same-diameter marketed single-use comparators in a bench model simulation.
Background: Endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS TBNA) of mediastinal lymphadenopathy has been shown to be equivalent and possibly even superior to mediastinoscopy. Since the original dedicated 22-G aspiration needle, 21-G, 25-G, and recently 19-G needles have been introduced. Smaller needles may be more flexible and adept at accessing more difficult nodes, and may have less blood contamination compared with larger needles.Patients and Methods: This is a prospective observational study of 50 consecutive patients who underwent endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration with a 21-G needle and a 25-G needle for a total of 100 biopsies. The study slides were examined by a dedicated lung cytopathologist, who was blinded to the needle size used for each slide. Demographic data, and lymph node size were recorded. Comparisons between the 2 needles with regards to sample adequacy and diagnostic yield was performed using the McNemar test for dichotomous variables and marginal homogeneity test for nondichotomous variables since samples were related.Results: The majority of lymph nodes (96%) were at least > 1 cm. Adequate specimens were obtained in 78% of cases with the 21-G needle and 86% of cases with 25-G needle (P-value = 0.424). The overall diagnostic yield was 74% and 80% with the 21-G needle and 25-G needle, respectively (P-value = 0.607). Conclusion:Our study demonstrates that the there is no difference in terms of specimen adequacy and diagnostic yield when the 25-G needle is compared with the 21-G needle.
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