Effectiveness and Safety of Percutaneous Image-Guided Lung Biopsies: Analysis of 27559 Procedures from the German Society for Interventional Radiology and Minimally Invasive Therapy Registry.

Journal: RoFo : Fortschritte auf dem Gebiete der Rontgenstrahlen und der Nuklearmedizin

Title: Effectiveness and Safety of Percutaneous Image-Guided Lung Biopsies: Analysis of 27,559 Procedures from the DeGIR Registry (2018–2024)

Summary for clinical practice:

  • Design & setting: Large multicenter registry analysis from 212 centers in Germany, covering 27,559 percutaneous image-guided lung biopsies performed between 2018 and 2024.
  • Technique:
    • Guidance: CT used in 99.4% of cases.
    • Setting: 95.9% performed in the inpatient setting.
    • Anesthesia: Local anesthesia in 97.5% of procedures.
  • Performance:
    • Technical success (verified needle placement): 97.7%.
    • Diagnostic yield (adequate histology obtained): 94.3%.
    • Inpatient vs outpatient:
      • Technical success: slightly higher in inpatients (97.8% vs 96.8%, p = 0.032).
      • Diagnostic yield: similar (94.3% vs 92.9%, p = 0.063).
  • Safety:
    • Overall complication rate: 19.4%.
    • Major complications (per SIR criteria): 4.9%.
    • Mortality: 0.06%.
    • Coagulation disorders were associated with increased complication risk.
  • Clinical implications:
    • Image-guided lung biopsy provides high technical success and diagnostic yield on a national scale, supporting its central role in working up pulmonary nodules, especially as screening expands.
    • The nearly 20% overall and 5% major complication rates underscore the need for:
      • Careful patient selection (particularly evaluating bleeding risk and comorbidities).
      • Individualized risk stratification.
      • Thoughtful decisions on inpatient vs outpatient setting for higher-risk patients.

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