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Next-generation sequencing of pancreatic cyst wall specimens obtained using micro-forceps for improving diagnostic accuracy

Astbury, Stuart; Baskar, Aishwarya; Grove, Jane I; Kaye, Philip; Aravinthan, Aloysious Dominic; James, Martin; Clarke, Christopher; Aithal, Guruprasad P.; Venkatachalapathy, Suresh Vasan

Next-generation sequencing of pancreatic cyst wall specimens obtained using micro-forceps for improving diagnostic accuracy Thumbnail


Authors

Aishwarya Baskar

Profile image of JANE GROVE

JANE GROVE jane.grove@nottingham.ac.uk
Associate Professor

Philip Kaye

Aloysious Dominic Aravinthan

Martin James

Christopher Clarke

Suresh Vasan Venkatachalapathy



Abstract

Background and study aims: Pancreatic cysts are common incidental findings, with an estimated prevalence of 13-15% in imaging done for other reasons. Diagnosis often relies on collection of cyst fluid, but tissue sampling using micro-forceps may allow for a more reliable diagnosis and higher yield of DNA for next-generation sequencing (NGS). The primary aim was to assess the performance of NGS in identifying mucinous cyst. The secondary aims were to assess DNA yield between the cyst fluid and cyst wall tissue, complication rate and performance of conventional investigations.

Patients and methods: 24 patients referred for endoscopic ultrasound were recruited. Biopsies were taken using micro-forceps and the AmpliSeq Cancer Hotspot panel was used for NGS, a PCR assay targeting several hotspots within 50 genes, including GNAS, KRAS and VHL.

Results: The concentration of DNA extracted from 24 cyst wall samples was significantly higher than in the 9/24 available matched cyst fluid samples. The sensitivity, specificity and diagnostic accuracy of NGS for diagnosing mucinous cyst was 93%, 50% and 84%, standard of care -66.6%, 50% and 63.1% and for standard of care with NGS was 100%, 50% and 89.4% respectively. Cyst wall biopsy was able to diagnose 19/24 cysts (4 high risk, 7 intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm, 4 cysts of mucinous origin and 4 benign).

Conclusions: NGS data correlate well with histology and may aid in diagnosis and risk stratification of pancreatic cysts. Cyst wall biopsy performs well in diagnosing cysts but was inadequate in five of 24 patients.

Citation

Astbury, S., Baskar, A., Grove, J. I., Kaye, P., Aravinthan, A. D., James, M., …Venkatachalapathy, S. V. (2023). Next-generation sequencing of pancreatic cyst wall specimens obtained using micro-forceps for improving diagnostic accuracy. Endoscopy International Open, 11(10), E983-E991. https://doi.org/10.1055/a-2163-8805

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 15, 2023
Online Publication Date Oct 12, 2023
Publication Date 2023-10
Deposit Date Sep 14, 2023
Publicly Available Date Sep 14, 2023
Journal Endoscopy International Open
Print ISSN 2364-3722
Electronic ISSN 2196-9736
Publisher Thieme Publishing
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 11
Issue 10
Pages E983-E991
DOI https://doi.org/10.1055/a-2163-8805
Keywords Pancreatobiliary (ERCP/PTCD), Tissue diagnosis, Endoscopic ultrasonography, Pancreas, Fine-needle aspiration/biopsy, GI Pathology
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/24870318
Publisher URL https://www.thieme-connect.de/products/ejournals/abstract/10.1055/a-2163-8805

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