Pulmonology (Dec 2025)

Ultrathin bronchoscopy-guided small airway biopsy for diagnosing sarcoidosis: A prospective study

  • Rocco Trisolini,
  • Giovanni Sotgiu,
  • Alessandra Cancellieri,
  • Giuliana Pasciuto,
  • Vanina Livi,
  • Maria Chiara Flore,
  • Marta Viscuso,
  • Daniele Magnini,
  • Fausto Leoncini,
  • QuianQuian Zhang,
  • Mariangela Puci,
  • Luca Richeldi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/25310429.2024.2411806
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31, no. 1

Abstract

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New ultrathin bronchoscopes (UTBs) enable the inspection and biopsy of small airways, potentially offering diagnostic advantages in sarcoidosis. In this prospective study, patients with suspected sarcoidosis underwent airway inspection with a UTB. Observed airway abnormalities were categorised into six predefined patterns. UTB-directed small airway biopsies (SABs) were collected from the upper lobes following a standardised procedure. We evaluated the prevalence and patterns of SAAs, as well as the diagnostic yield of UTB-directed SAB. Among 79 participants, 65 (82.3%) were diagnosed with sarcoidosis. Small airway abnormalities were identified in 26/65 (40%) patients, predominantly in those with parenchymal involvement on CT compared to those with lymphadenopathy only (58.1% VS. 23.5%, P = 0.005). The diagnostic yield of SABs for detecting granulomas was significantly higher in patients with SAAs than in those without (65.4% VS. 23.1%, P = 0.001) and in patients with parenchymal disease on CT compared to those without (54.8% VS. 26.5%, P = 0.02). Notably, random biopsies taken under direct visualisation from small airway carinas revealed peribronchiolar parenchyma in 23% of the patients. Small airway abnormalities are prevalent in sarcoidosis patients with parenchymal involvement, and biopsying these abnormalities yields a high rate of granuloma detection.

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