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Ultrathin Bronchoscopy for Solitary Pulmonary Nodules (Babyscope)

University of Zurich (UZH) logo

University of Zurich (UZH)

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Lung Cancer

Treatments

Other: bronchoscopy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02490059
2000-C094

Details and patient eligibility

About

The evaluation of solitary pulmonary nodules (SPN) requires a balance between procedure-related morbidity and diagnostic yield, particularly in areas where tuberculosis is endemic. Data on ultrathin bronchoscopy (UB) for this purpose is limited. In this prospective randomised trial we compared diagnostic yield and adverse events of UB with standard-size bronchoscopy (SB) in a cohort of patients with SPN located beyond the visible range of SB.

Full description

The present prospective single-centre randomised pilot study was performed at Tygerberg Academic Hospital, a tertiary university hospital in Cape Town, South Africa, with a referral drainage area of 1.5 million people and tuberculosis notification rate of up to 1'000/100'000 persons per year when the study was performed. Between November 2000 and November 2003 all patients referred to the lung unit with single pulmonary lesion ≤ 6 cm in diameter on chest computed tomography (CT) were included. SPN was defined as a single and circumscribed pulmonary lesion with a diameter ≤ 6.0 cm, surrounded by aerated lung tissue, and without evidence of atelectasis, pneumonitis, or cavity on CT scan. Location and maximal diameter of all SPNs were recorded from the chest CT prior to enrolment of patients. Inclusion criteria were a previous cytological and microbiological negative sputum examination, absence of enlarged mediastinal or hilar lymph nodes on chest CT scan, and informed consent obtained before start of the procedure. Exclusion criteria were SPN with lesion size unchanged over two years, inability to undergo bronchoscopy or thoracotomy, and pregnancy. Participants with consent for participation in the study in whom the lesion was found to be visible on SB were then not randomised and not considered part of the study population. Written informed consent was obtained from all patients before inclusion in the study.

Enrollment

40 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Pulmonary nodule on a recent CT
  • non-visible on standard-size bronchoscopy

Exclusion criteria

  • missing informed consent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

40 participants in 2 patient groups

Standard size bronchoscopy
Active Comparator group
Description:
ll procedures were started using SB with an external diameter of 5.0-6.0 mm with a biopsy channel of 2.2-2.8 mm (models Olympus BF-30 and BF-1T160, Olympus, Tokyo, Japan). If during SB the lesion was endoscopically visible the bronchoscopy was continued as standard diagnostic procedure and the patients were excluded from the analysis. Only if no tumour was visible during complete inspection of the bronchial tree using the SB, a participant was randomised by opening a numbered sealed opaque envelope. Randomisation was performed using sequentially numbered (1-40) sealed opaque envelopes (block randomisation: block size 4). For subjects allocated to the SB group, the examination was immediately continued with the same SB bronchoscope.
Treatment:
Other: bronchoscopy
Ultrahin bronchoscopy
Experimental group
Description:
For subjects randomised to UB, the instrument was changed immediately to an Olympus BF-XP 40 ultrathin bronchoscope with an outer diameter of 2.8 mm and a working channel 1.2 mm during the same bronchoscopy session.
Treatment:
Other: bronchoscopy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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