AI Article Synopsis

  • - Mediastinal lymphadenopathy can indicate various conditions, including lymphoma, and the best biopsy method currently used is transbronchial needle aspiration, which has variable effectiveness and limitations in accurately distinguishing lymphoma types.
  • - More invasive procedures like mediastinoscopy yield better diagnostic results and maintain lymph node structure for accurate classification, but they also come with a higher risk of complications.
  • - Newer techniques like core biopsy needles and cryobiopsy show promise in improving diagnostic accuracy but need further research to establish standardized practices for diagnosing lymphoma, especially since pleural effusions related to lymphoma are common.

Article Abstract

Mediastinal lymphadenopathy has a broad differential diagnosis which includes lymphoma. The current preferred biopsy technique for mediastinal lymph nodes is transbronchial needle aspiration which has mixed results in terms of sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic yields; there are also limitations with subtyping lymphomas with needle aspiration alone which can be a barrier to determine management strategies. Invasive mediastinal lymph node sampling such was with mediastinoscopy provides higher yields and preserved lymph node architecture for both diagnosis and subtyping of lymphoma but carries a higher risk of morbidity and complications. Novel techniques that may increase the diagnostic yield of bronchoscopy in the diagnosis of lymphoma are core biopsy needles, intranodal forcep biopsy, and intranodal cryobiopsy. The evidence is limited due to a relatively small number of cases, so further research is needed to standardize best practices for the bronchoscopic diagnosis of lymphoma. Pleural effusions in lymphoma can be present in up to 30 % of cases with the majority being non-Hodgkins's lymphoma. The presence of exudative effusion in the setting of an existing or prior diagnosis of lymphoma should raise clinical suspicions. Other less common subtypes of lymphoma presenting as primary pleural effusions are explored as well.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rmed.2024.107765DOI Listing

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