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Revista Española de Enfermedades Digestivas

versión impresa ISSN 1130-0108

Rev. esp. enferm. dig. vol.103 no.2 Madrid feb. 2011

 

ORIGINAL PAPERS

 

Impact of endoscopic ultrasonography on the management of a prospective cohort of 700 consecutive patients referred for diagnostic endoscopic ultrasonography

Impacto de la ultrasonografía endoscópica en el manejo terapéutico de una cohorte prospectiva de 700 pacientes consecutivos referidos para USE diagnóstica

 

 

F. González-Panizo1, E. Vázquez-Sequeiros2, J. R. Foruny-Olcina2, V. Defarges-Pons2, M. García1, D. Boixeda-de-Miquel2, V. Moreira-Vicente2, D. Juzgado-Lucas1 y J. M. Milicua-Salamero2

1Endoscopy Unit. Digestive Diseases Department. Quirón University Hospital. Madrid, Spain
2Endoscopy Unit. Gastroenterology Department. Ramón y Cajal University Hospital. Madrid, Spain

Correspondence

 

 


ABSTRACT

Background: endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) is a high accuracy technique for the study of many digestive diseases. The degree of knowledge about the impact of EUS on the management of these patients is inadequate.
Aim: to determine the therapeutic impact of endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) on a prospective cohort of patients.
Methods: all patients referred for EUS over a period of 2 years were prospectively evaluated in order to asses: 1. EUS provides new information not previously known; 2. theoretic impact of EUS on patient management; 3. real impact of EUS on final therapy; 4. changes in the aggressiveness of the therapeutic decision after EUS.
Results: 700 patients were included. Preoperative assessment of digestive tumors was the commonest indication. EUS provided "new information" in the 89% of the patients. With regard to endoscopist opinion, these findings should alter the management in 79% of patients ("theoretic impact"). However, EUS prompted a change in the management in 67% of patients ("real impact"). Final therapy post-EUS was less aggressive in 34% of patients. Changes in therapeutic decision were associated with EUS findings, alcohol intake and age ≥ 57 years old.
Conclusions: 1) EUS findings, advanced age, and alcohol intake are associated with a change in the management in 2 out of every 3 patients referred for EUS. 2) Therapeutic decision (post-EUS) is less aggressive in a third of these patients, what should represent a significant economic saving.

Key words: Impact. Clinical impact. Cost-effectiveness. Usefulness. Endoscopic ultrasonography.


RESUMEN

Antecedentes: la ultrasonografía endoscópica (USE) es una técnica de gran precisión para el estudio de diferentes patologías digestivas. El grado de conocimiento sobre el impacto de la USE en el tratamiento de estos pacientes es escaso.
Objetivo: determinar el impacto terapéutico de la USE en una cohorte prospectiva de pacientes.
Material y métodos: estudio que evalúa de forma prospectiva a todos los pacientes remitidos para USE en un periodo de 2 años. Se analiza: a) si la USE aporta información no conocida previamente; b) el impacto teórico de la USE en el tratamiento; c) el impacto final/real de USE en el tratamiento; d) la variación en la decisión terapéutica tras realizar la USE.
Resultados: se incluyeron 700 pacientes. La indicación más frecuente de USE era el estudio preoperatorio de tumores digestivos. La USE aportó "información nueva" en el 89% de los casos. En opinión del ecoendoscopista estos hallazgos deberían suponer un cambio terapéutico en el 79% de los pacientes ("impacto teórico"). Sin embargo, el tratamiento sólo se modificó en el 67% de los casos ("impacto real"). La estrategia terapéutica post-USE fue menos agresiva en el 34% de los casos. Los cambios en la actitud terapéutica se asociaban con los hallazgos de USE, ingesta de alcohol y edad > 57 años.
Conclusiones:
- Los hallazgos de la USE, la edad avanzada y el consumo de alcohol, se asocian con un cambio terapéutico en 2 de cada 3 pacientes remitidos a una unidad de USE.
- La decisión terapéutica final (post-USE) es menos agresiva en un tercio de estos pacientes, lo que podría representar un ahorro económico significativo.

Palabras clave: Impacto. Impacto clínico. Coste-efectividad. Utilidad. Ultrasonografía endoscópica.


 

Introduction

Over the last 30 years, endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) has achieved a great importance as a diagnostic tool (1-3). By now, its availability in the endoscopy units of our country is growing, and EUS has turned into a mainstay of the management of many digestive diseases. Oncologic pathology (digestive or not) probably represents the most common indication for EUS (2,3).

High diagnostic accuracy and low rates of complications have consolidated EUS as the technique of choice in the locoregional staging of many neoplasms occasionally replacing previous diagnostic options (CT or MRI). However, in the clinical practice, the therapeutic decision about these patients does not depend only on the information provided by EUS, but it uses to be multidisciplinary management (surgeons, gastroenterologists, oncologists, internal medicine specialists, pneumologists...). EUS assessment represents another step in the multidisciplinary evaluation process, and considerations about EUS findings by different specialists vary widely. Few studies have assessed the therapeutic and economic impact of EUS(4). Controlled studies about this issue are needed in order to determine the real importance of EUS in clinical practice.

 

Aim

To determine the real therapeutic impact of EUS on a prospective cohort of non-selected patients referred to the Endoscopy Unit of a third-level hospital for diagnostic EUS.

 

Methods

Study design

Prospective design study carried out in two different hospitals. All patients referred for diagnostic EUS over a period of 24 months were considered candidates to take part in the study if they met the following criteria:

Inclusion criteria: 1. Patient older than 18 years. 2. EUS indication according the European Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy guidelines (2,3) (Table I). Exclusion criteria: 1. Serious coagulopathy: platelets < 50.000 and/or Prothrombine activity < 50%. 2. Patient rejected to take part in the study.

All the EUS explorations were performed by an expert echoendoscopist (> 5 year and > 5000 EUS performed). Only one echoendoscopist took part of this study (EVS). All the explorations were performed as an out-patient (excepting those patients admitted for other reasons), in a conventional endoscopic room and under conscious sedation controlled by endoscopist (Mydazolam, Propofol, Fentanyl and Pethidine with doses adjusted according to patient). EUS exam was performed with radial echoendoscope Olympus GF-UM160 (5-20 MHz, processor EU-M60) and/or linear echoendoscope Olympus GF-UCT160-OL5 (7.5MHz, processor EU-C60). EUS-gui-ded puncture (EUS-FNA) was performed with linear echoendoscope and puncture needle EUS-N1 Cook® of 22 G or 19 G, following conventional technique, only in those patients in which it was requested by clinical practice.

EUS technique

To perform EUS of the upper digestive tract the echoendoscope was introduced into the duodenal second portion, were the exploration started evaluating the head of the pancreas, the biliary tree and hepatic hilum. During the withdrawal, duodenal bulb, gastric antrum and body, subcardial region and esophagus were explored (evaluating both the digestive wall and the adjacent structures), emphasizing in those areas related with the specific indication of EUS in every case. EUS of the lower digestive tract was performed entering the echoendoscope as far as 25-30 cm from anal margin, where the exploration started evaluating the bifurcation of the iliac arteries. During the withdrawal, rectal and anal wall and adjacent structures were explored.

Estimation of the therapeutic impact

At the end of each EUS, the echoendoscopist that performed it noted down if, according to his criteria, EUS provided new information about the pathology in study not previously known with other diagnostic tests (CT, MRI, etc) (new information provided by EUS: YES / NO). The echoendoscopist also noted if, in his opinion, that new information was clinically significant, and so, it should modify the management of the patient (theorical impact of EUS on treatment: YES / NO). Later, those doctors in charge of each patient, either separately or in the bosson of multidisciplinary committees, decided the most advisable therapy for the patient (no treatment/observation, surgery, chemo-radiotherapy...). That final decision was made considering EUS findings and also analytic, radiologic and demographic factors (age, sex, toxic habits, comorbidities,...) of the patients. Based on this information, real impact of EUS in this cohort of patients was estimated (real impact of EUS: YES / NO). It was analyzed if information provided by EUS and the other factors described was associated with a change in the therapeutic management of the patients. In those cases in which therapeutic decision was modified after EUS, it was determined if the new evidence provided by EUS favored a more or less aggressive treatment. (post-EUS treatment: more/less aggressive).

The next clinical case serves as an example to describe our approach to the estimation of the impact of EUS in this cohort of patients: 58 year old patient without relevant medical history, with a recent endoscopic diagnose of adenocarcinoma of the rectum, and computer tomography (CT) showed no extraparietal extension or lymph node/distant metastases (CT Stage T2N0); EUS is performed reporting tumoral invasion outside the muscularis propria, with no lymph node affectation (EUS stage T3N0); the patient is evaluated by the Committee of Tumors, that decide that new evidence provided by EUS (transmural invasion), not demonstrated by CT, must favor a change the management of the patient, adding previous neoadjuvant therapy to surgical intervention alone. In this case EUS provided new information (YES), in regard with echoendoscopists opinion this new information should influence the management of the patient (theoretical impact of EUS on treatment: YES). Consensus decision achieved by the committee of tumors modifying the treatment, adding neoadjuvant therapy, according to new evidence provided by EUS, should determine the real therapeutic impact (real impact of EUS: YES) and treatment would have been modified, adopting a more aggressive therapeutic strategy (add neoadjuvant therapy to surgery alone) (post-EUS treatment: more aggressive).

Statistical analysis

Statistical analysis of the data obtained in this study was made with the computer program JMP 7.0.2 (SAS Institute Inc., North Carolina, USA). Descriptive analysis of the variables was made:

a.) Discrete variables: were described as percentage and confidence interval of 95%; b.) Continuous variables (normal distribution: mean, standard deviation and range), (non-normal distribution: median, interquartil range and range). In the univariated comparative analysis of the variables, statistical test used were Chi² and Fisher Exact (discrete variables) and ANOVA and H of Kruskal-Wallis (continuous variables). Multivariated analysis of therapeutic impact of EUS and the rest of the data gathered (sex, tobacco consumption, comorbidities...) was made by means of multiple logistic regression (the age of the patient and alcohol consumption were considered for this kind of analysis as ≥ than the median in this cohort of patients, 57 years old and 32 g/day: YES or NO). The level of statistical significance was established in α = 0.05.

 

Results

Basal data of the patients included

In the period of time described, a total of 700 consecutive patients that met the requirements of the study were included. Mean age of the patients included was 59 years old (range 14-91) with little predominance of men (57%). 54% of the patients consumed tobacco and 63% revealed regular alcohol intake. In relation to the presence of comorbidities, 15% of the patients had any kind of a cardiopathy, 9% were diabetics and 9% met clinical criteria for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Seventy nine percent of the patients had an endoscopic procedure done before (table II). Most common indications for EUS were: pancreas/biliary tree tumor, esophageal/ gastric tumor, chronic/idiopathic pancreatitis and subepithelial tumor (table III).

 

Analysis of therapeutic of EUS (Table IV)

"New information": According to echoendoscopist criteria, EUS provided information (about the pathology in study) not previously known by other diagnostic tests in 89% of the patients evaluated (625 of 700 patients).

"Theoretical impact": Echoendoscopist estimated that new information provided by EUS should favor a change in the treatment in 79% of the patients included.

"Real impact": However, final decision taken by doctors in charge of the patients (considering EUS infomation and all the available data: age, comorbilities, other image tests, etc) was only modified in 67% of the patients. Final therapeutic strategy after EUS, taking into account all the factors described above, was less aggressive that the strategy before EUS in 34% of the patients.

Univariate and multivariate analysis (multiple logistic regression) demonstrated that changes in the final therapeutic strategy (real impact), less aggressive, were significantly associated with the next analyzed factors: 1. EUS findings, 2. Alcohol intake (≥ 32 g/day) and 3. Advanced age (≥ 57 years old) (p<0.05). The other factors analyzed (sex, tobacco consumption, diabetes, COPD, cardiopathy) were not significantly associated with changes in the therapeutic attitude (p > 0.05) (table V).

 

Discussion

EUS has become one of the main tools for the study of a great variety of diseases. This is mainly due to its ability to reproduce high quality images in real time and in hard access locations, allowing in addition, obtention of the histological tissue samples with a low rate of complications. However, there are no contrasted data supporting if the perception that gastroenterologists in general, and echoendoscopists in particular, have about EUS usefulness is real, or on the other hand, EUS only provides known information previously acquired by other non-invasive diagnostic tests. Results of this controlled study shows that EUS provides new information (not known before performing EUS) in 89% of the patients evaluated. These data are in accordance with previous studies (5-30).

Results about the therapeutic impact of EUS in the cohort of patients described in this study are similar to those described by Giovannini and cols (31). This group retrospectively reviewed their experience in the field of EUS for 11 years, in which they performed diagnostic EUS in more than 1500 patients with digestive tumors. The study published by Giovannini assessed effectiveness, safety and clinical (therapeutic) impact of EUS and EUS-FNA in this retrospective cohort of patients. Sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic accuracy were 84.6%, 98.4% and 86.9%, respectively. EUS-FNA allowed the obtention of adequate tissue samples for cytological study in 80-85% of the cases, and avoided the realization of most aggressive techniques, with higher morbid-mortality, in 44% of the patients. In the study of Giovannini, from what authors said, EUS/EUS-FNA modified the diagnosis and/or therapeutic attitude in 1801 patients of 1544 (70.1%). These data are similar to that demonstrated in our study (real impact of EUS on treatment, 67%). Specifically, in the study of Giovannini, in 161 patients with esophageal, gastric, pancreatic or rectal tumors, the finding of metastatic lymph nodes according to TNM system, as well as little hepatic implants, not described by CT, modified therapeutic strategy. Likewise, in 242 patients with solid pancreatic lesions (previously described by other image diagnostic tests), EUS-FNA result modified therapeutic strategy after cytopathological classification of the tumor.

Recently, Ginés et al. published a critical review of the existent literature about the impact of EUS and EUS-FNA in the diagnosis of the extent, management, prognosis, survival and economics in esophageal cancer (4). This analysis and critical review of the literature is, in our opinion, more realistic than the study of Giovannini, and what it shows is the great disagreement among the different studies performed evaluating therapeutic impact (32-37). In these studies, utility and impact of EUS range between 26% (32, 33) and 80% (37). This great variability could be justified, at least in part, due to the heterogeneity of the methodology used in the different studies when quantifying therapeutic impact, and due to the differences in the design of the studies. The systematic review performed by Ginés et al. reveals how difficult is to estimate adequately the real utility of EUS in this indication due to the existence of few controlled data. This happens in similar way in other pathologies in which EUS is usually indicated, as for example, pancreatic cancer. Though EUS can avoid surgical obtaining of histological diagnosis of the nature of a pancreatic tumor in more than 80% of the cases, therapeutic impact of EUS-FNA varies widely depending the study consulted (from 30 to 70% of the patients) (38, 39,40). It has been suggested than methodological differences among studies and, above all, the different perception and approval on the part of the surgeons and oncologists of the information provided by EUS/EUS-FNA could be responsible of the differences observed.

Existent data about impact of EUS/EUS-FNA in rectal cancer (EUS helps to detect those patients with locally advanced disease in which preoperatory neoadjuvant treatment will be beneficial) are less optimistic. The published studies estimate a therapeutic impact of EUS in this pathology around 32% (41). The development and implantation of MRI as the common tool in loco-regional staging in rectal cancer may be related with this limited impact. Specifically, mesorectal affectation is one of the main factors that surgeons and oncologistis take into account to make the right decision. This information is provided accurately by MRI and not by EUS. However, results from our study suggest that information provided by EUS in this pathology (fundamentally perirectal fat tissue and malignant lymph nodes affectation) has a real impact in the treatment of 71% of the patients, irrespective of mesorectal affectation.

To avoid part of the methodological problems described, in this study we have intended to evaluate in a prospective, controlled and systematized way the data described in methods section:

1. "EUS provides new information";
2. "Theoretical impact of EUS";
3. "Real impact of EUS";
4. "Post-EUS treatment" (more/less aggressive or the same).

Though items 1 and 2 are subjective estimations of the echoendoscopist of the efficacy of EUS (probable bias in favor of EUS) items 3 and 4 reflect objectively if there has been a change in therapeutic attitude. When there is a change in therapeutic attitude, statistical analysis will show if this change is associated or not with EUS findings and with other factors, what will measure in a real way the impact of EUS. Differences between items 1 and 2 vs. 3 and 4 probably reflect the excessively magnified perception that the endosonographers have about the efficacy of EUS against the perception of the doctors that look after these patients daily. However, some authors suggest that it is also possible that part of the information provided by EUS is not adequately recognized or understood by the doctors that request this test. This hypothesis is sustained in the results of studies as the published by Maple and cols (42), in which they asses the use of EUS on the part of thoracic surgeons. In this study, up to 85% of the surgeons polled consider adequate the realization of EUS in the preoperative staging of esophageal cancer, though only 50% of them recognize to request it in their clinical practice. On the other hand, in this study 16-29% of the surgeons recognize, though the existence of solid evidence favoring the use of EUS, that they consider CT and PET the most accuracy diagnostic test for T-N staging of these patients. In this same study, Maple et al. evidence that youngest surgeons and those with access to endoscopy units with higher experience, are most inclined to request EUS during the preoperative study of this kind of tumors. Perhaps a better popularization of EUS indications and usefulness, should help to reduce the current differences between the theorical impact (determined by the echoendoscopist) and the real impact (determined by the doctor in charge of the final therapeutic decision), as the results of our study reflect.

In our opinion, one of the most relevant findings of the present study is the change in the therapeutic attitude experienced in 2 out of every 3 patients evaluated (67%) after the realization of EUS. This change in the therapeutic attitude was independent of if the indication was EUS of the upper (66% of changes in the therapeutic attitude) or lower digestive tract (71%). Univariated and multivariated analysis (multiple logistic regression) showed that EUS findings (echoendoscopist opinion), an advanced age of the patient (≥ 57 years old) and alcohol intake (≥ 32 g/day), were associated in a statistically significant way to changes in the final therapeutic attitude, which was less aggressive (Table V). We think that this result is of great clinical relevance, because it makes clear that the information provided by EUS, with the other data, has a real impact in clinical practice in those patients referred for EUS. In our opinion, these results justify the use of EUS in the clinical practice in those indications described in table I.

On the other hand, we also think that it is important to stand out that in approximately a third of patients included in the study, the final therapeutic decision was less aggressive than what it would have been adopted without the realization of EUS (Table IV). Though cost analysis was not among the aims of this study, the fact that the information provided by EUS allows avoiding the realization of more aggressive tests and/or treatments in 34% of patients, should have a significant impact in order to reduce the costs derived of the diagnose and treatment of the different pathologies evaluated in this study. This hypothesis is in accordance with the results of the cost-effectiveness and cost-minimization published studies (28,43,44).

In conclusion, results of this prospective study provide objective and controlled data about the real utility of EUS for the study, diagnose and therapeutic decision of the patients referred for diagnostic EUS. These results suggest that the age of the patient, alcohol intake and EUS findings influence in a significant way the treatment received by the patients. EUS findings favor a less aggressive treatment in almost a third of patients. Economic implications of these findings should be analyzed in future studies. The results of this study support the routine use of EUS for the referred indications.

 

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Correspondence:
Enrique Vázquez-Sequeiros.
e-mail: evazquezs@hotmail.com

Received: 14-06-10.
Accepted: 27-07-10.

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