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Liver biopsy may be indicated in various clinical scenarios to help diagnose and manage liver diseases. Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) liver biopsy and percutaneous USG guided liver biopsy are two methods used to obtain liver tissue samples. EUS involves using an endoscope with an ultrasound probe to guide a needle through the stomach wall and into the liver, while percutaneous ultrasound guided biopsy involves inserting a needle directly through the skin and into the liver using ultrasound guidance.
A specimen measuring 15 mm or more and containing 6 to 8 CPTs is generally considered adequate for the histologic diagnosis of diffuse liver disease. However, stricter requirements of specimen length of 20 mm or longer with 11 or more CPTs for reliable grading and staging of chronic viral hepatitis have been recommended. With this study we aim to study in a head-to-head comparison between EUS-guided and percutaneous (PC) liver biopsies, with regards to tissue acquisition adequacy.
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Aim and Objective - EUS-LB with a 19G Franseen needle is non-inferior to PC-LB with a 18G BioPince Needle, with regards to total specimen length and diagnostic adequacy.
Hypothesis - i. EUS-LB with a 19G FNB needle is non-inferior to PC-LB with a 18G full core biopsy needle, with regards to total specimen length and diagnostic adequacy.
ii. There would be lesser procedure related pain and higher patient satisfaction with EUS-LB compared to PC-LB.
Study population:
Study design: All consecutive in-patients and out-patients requiring liver biopsy for evaluation of diffuse parenchymal liver disease will be evaluated for inclusion.
Study period: 1 year
AEs will be defined as any deviation from the anticipated intra-procedure and post-procedural course.
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90 participants in 2 patient groups
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Dr Ishank Johri, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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