Currently, the EBUS bronchoscopy procedure uses either one or two needles to perform the biopsy of the lymph node based on physician preference. We want to determine the optimal number of needles to use for future EBUS bronchoscopy procedures like the one you are scheduled to have for your care and investigate the economic and environmental impact and time involved in using one versus two needles.
Endobronchial Ultrasound (EBUS) is a mainstay of diagnostic bronchoscopy, as it is performed for mediastinal and hilar lymph node sampling for cancer staging, diagnosis of sarcoidosis, lymphoma, infection, and other disease processes. It is a procedure that is commonplace in all bronchoscopy suites across the world. In our bronchoscopy suite, our current practice varies based on the bronchoscopist and number of lymph nodes requiring sampling in a procedure (can range from 1-5) as to whether one or two needles are utilized. The bronchoscopist may use two needles to save time when multiple lymph nodes must be biopsied or if an individual node needs to be biopsied several times to obtain more tissue for pathologic study. EBUS needles are single use and there is one randomized trial (n=20 patients) that showed a decreased time of procedure in patients where two needles were used versus one (Khan et al., 2013). However, no data exist evaluating the economic impact (cost of needle versus endoscopy dollars saved) or environmental impact of using one versus two needles. This study will examine these factors to determine the optimal way to perform this procedure in the future, considering the procedure and anesthesia time, economic costs, and environmental costs.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
126
We randomized patients to the two arms above; there was no specific intervention performed other than randomizing patients to one or two needles.
University of California, Davis
Sacramento, California, United States
Northwestern University
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Duke University
Durham, North Carolina, United States
Time Under Anesthesia
Time frame: During bronchoscopy procedure
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