EUS-guided liver applications
According to Dr. Hwang and colleagues, a growing body of evidence supports EUS-guided liver biopsy, including a high rate of histologic diagnoses (93.9%), Doppler-based detection of blood flow within the needle track prior to needle removal, ability to perform several needle actuations through a single puncture in the liver capsule, rapid patient recovery, ability to sample both liver lobes, potential for simultaneous endoscopy, and lower overall cost (accounting for complications, recovery time, and nondiagnostic yield).
And biopsies may be the first of many EUS-guided liver procedures to come, the investigators suggested.
“[EUS-guided liver biopsy] likely will be followed by EUS-guided portal pressure gradient measurement and EUS-guided shear wave elastography,” the investigators wrote. “There now is potential for a one-stop-shop diagnosis and staging of liver disease.”
Still, work is needed to facilitate greater clinical adoption of interventional EUS.
“[W]idespread implementation of interventional EUS is likely to require support from gastrointestinal societies and buy-in from other key stakeholders including payors,” wrote Dr. Hwang and colleagues. “Continued work by the gastrointestinal societies and manufacturers in providing training programs, and creating instruments, environments, and policies that motivate endoscopists to adopt new practices, is essential for growing the field of interventional EUS.”
The white paper was resulted from a session focused on interventional EUS a the 2019 ASGA Tech Summit, organized by the AGA Center for GI Innovation and Technology. The investigators disclosed additional relationships with Boston Scientific Corporation, Vyaire Medical, Cook Medical, and others.
SOURCE: DeWitt JM et al. Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2020 Sep 17. doi: 10.1016/j.cgh.2020.09.029.
This story was updated on 12/4/2020.