Ultrasound-guided biopsy method improves diagnosis of endometrial disease
A procedure used in conjunction with a vaginal ultrasound might make it easier to visualize and diagnose diseases in the lining of the uterus, according to a study available online and in the April issue of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Physicians evaluated the endometrium in women who were in the midst of or had gone through menopause and who complained of abnormal bleeding, according to the authors. Abnormal bleeding can indicate certain diseases of the endometrium that may or may not be malignant. The current standard of care is to blindly biopsy the endometrium; however, the biopsy might not always sample the part of the cavity that is diseased.
Researchers from the University of Texas (UT) Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas showed that using saline-infusion sonography (SIS) allows doctors to actually see where in the endometrium a polyp or growth exists and to biopsy it accordingly.
"Saline-infusion sonography augments the usual transvaginal sonogram and lets us see what is inside the endometrium," said the study's lead author Elysia Moschos, MD, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at UT Southwestern. "Normally, the endometrial cavity is collapsed, but when we infuse it with saline, we can visualize inside the cavity and see if it contains any abnormalities."
On a sonogram, water appears dark and tissue is light, so polyps or tumors look bright in comparison with the surrounding saline solution, the authors wrote. Using the SIS procedure, physicians inject saline through a catheter threaded into the uterus through the cervix to fill up and expand the endometrial cavity. They wrote that physicians can then visualize and biopsy an existing growth under sono-guidance and send it to a pathologist for analysis.
Investigators obtained 88 SIS endometrial samples. In the final outcome of 80 of those samples, SIS sampling provided a diagnosis 89 percent of the time, compared with 52 percent for endometrial biopsy.
The study showed there were no women for whom blind biopsy of the endometrium would still be an appropriate first step, Moschos said. The blind biopsies missed 15 of 16 benign polyps and one-third of cancers.
By comparison, two-thirds of benign polyps were correctly diagnosed by SIS endometrial sampling and no premalignant or malignant growths were missed.
Abnormal bleeding is a common complaint among patients, particularly during and after menopause. Women experiencing this symptom need to be evaluated for any kind of gynecologic cancers, Moschos said. The first step should be imaging of the endometrium by ultrasound.
"In women with abnormal endometrial appearances, SIS should then be performed. If the endometrium is uniformly thickened on the SIS exam, only then is a blind biopsy appropriate," Moschos said. "However, most endometrial pathology is focal, and therefore directed sampling, such as with saline-infusion sonography guidance, is necessary."
The patients were all evaluated at Parkland Health and Hospital System in Dallas, the primary teaching hospital for UT Southwestern faculty physicians.
Physicians evaluated the endometrium in women who were in the midst of or had gone through menopause and who complained of abnormal bleeding, according to the authors. Abnormal bleeding can indicate certain diseases of the endometrium that may or may not be malignant. The current standard of care is to blindly biopsy the endometrium; however, the biopsy might not always sample the part of the cavity that is diseased.
Researchers from the University of Texas (UT) Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas showed that using saline-infusion sonography (SIS) allows doctors to actually see where in the endometrium a polyp or growth exists and to biopsy it accordingly.
"Saline-infusion sonography augments the usual transvaginal sonogram and lets us see what is inside the endometrium," said the study's lead author Elysia Moschos, MD, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at UT Southwestern. "Normally, the endometrial cavity is collapsed, but when we infuse it with saline, we can visualize inside the cavity and see if it contains any abnormalities."
On a sonogram, water appears dark and tissue is light, so polyps or tumors look bright in comparison with the surrounding saline solution, the authors wrote. Using the SIS procedure, physicians inject saline through a catheter threaded into the uterus through the cervix to fill up and expand the endometrial cavity. They wrote that physicians can then visualize and biopsy an existing growth under sono-guidance and send it to a pathologist for analysis.
Investigators obtained 88 SIS endometrial samples. In the final outcome of 80 of those samples, SIS sampling provided a diagnosis 89 percent of the time, compared with 52 percent for endometrial biopsy.
The study showed there were no women for whom blind biopsy of the endometrium would still be an appropriate first step, Moschos said. The blind biopsies missed 15 of 16 benign polyps and one-third of cancers.
By comparison, two-thirds of benign polyps were correctly diagnosed by SIS endometrial sampling and no premalignant or malignant growths were missed.
Abnormal bleeding is a common complaint among patients, particularly during and after menopause. Women experiencing this symptom need to be evaluated for any kind of gynecologic cancers, Moschos said. The first step should be imaging of the endometrium by ultrasound.
"In women with abnormal endometrial appearances, SIS should then be performed. If the endometrium is uniformly thickened on the SIS exam, only then is a blind biopsy appropriate," Moschos said. "However, most endometrial pathology is focal, and therefore directed sampling, such as with saline-infusion sonography guidance, is necessary."
The patients were all evaluated at Parkland Health and Hospital System in Dallas, the primary teaching hospital for UT Southwestern faculty physicians.