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Rapid On Site Evaluation of Pleural Touch Preparations in Diagnosing Malignant Pleural Effusion in Patients Undergoing Pleuroscopy

A Pilot Study to Evaluate the Diagnostic Performance of Pleural Touch Preparations in Pleuroscopy, a Prospective Study

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03868579
Enrollment
97
Registered
2019-03-11
Start date
2018-01-10
Completion date
2025-02-27
Last updated
2025-03-05

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Malignant Neoplasm, Malignant Respiratory Tract Neoplasm, Malignant Thoracic Neoplasm

Brief summary

This trial studies how well rapid on site evaluation of pleural touch preparations works in diagnosing cancerous fluid in between the linings of the lungs (malignant pleural effusion) in patients undergoing a pleuroscopy. A type of laboratory testing called rapid on site evaluation of pleural touch preparations that uses pleural biopsy tissue samples collected during an already-scheduled pleuroscopy may be able to diagnose malignant pleural effusion.

Detailed description

PRIMARY OBJECTIVES: I. To estimate the specificity of rapid on site evaluation (ROSE) of touch preparations (preps) for predicting malignancy on final pathology in pleuroscopy. SECONDARY OBJECTIVES: I. To estimate the sensitivity of rapid on site evaluation (ROSE) of touch preparations (preps) for predicting malignancy on final pathology in pleuroscopy. II. To estimate the specificity and sensitivity of visual assessment of pleura for predicting malignancy on final pathology in pleuroscopy. III. To compare the specificity and sensitivity of ROSE of touch preps between centers. OUTLINE: Patients undergo biopsy of the lining of the lung using pleuroscopy. Medical chart of patients is also reviewed.

Interventions

PROCEDUREBiopsy

Undergo biopsy

OTHERMedical Chart Review

Review medical chart

PROCEDUREThoracoscopy

Undergo pleuroscopy

Sponsors

National Cancer Institute (NCI)
CollaboratorNIH
M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NA
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Patients who will undergo pleuroscopy with biopsy

Exclusion criteria

* Patients with known malignant pleural effusion * Inability or unwillingness to give informed consent

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Specificity of rapid on site evaluation (ROSE) of touch preparations (preps) for predicting malignancyUp to 1 yearDescriptive statistics (e.g., frequencies, ranges, means, medians, proportions, and standard deviations \[SDs\]) along with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for the means or proportions will be computed for the measures of interest. Specificity will be defined as true negative (TN) divided by (TN + false positive \[FP\]). High probability of malignancy is defined as adequate tissue with tumor present. Low probability of malignancy defined is adequate tissue with no tumor present. Indeterminate probability of malignancy is defined as presence of atypical cells but inadequate for a definitive diagnosis on ROSE. Will collapse the indeterminate probability of malignancy (atypical cells category) found on touch preps into low probability for malignancy bin and indeterminate probability of malignancy on visual assessment into low probability for malignancy.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Specificity of visual assessment of pleura for predicting malignancyUp to 1 yearDescriptive statistics (e.g., frequencies, ranges, means, medians, proportions, and SDs) along with 95% CIs for the means or proportions will be computed for the measures of interest. Specificity will be defined as TN divided by (TN + FP). High probability of malignancy is defined as presence of abnormalities, such as studding, presence of parietal or visceral masses or nodules, or abnormal tissue deposits consistent with malignancy. Low probability is defined as absence of abnormalities or presence of purulent, fibrino-purulent pleural fluid or parietal and/or visceral pleura inflammation or thickening. Indeterminate probability is defined as findings which cannot include or exclude malignancy with certainty, such as inflammation of the pleura or adhesions, but that cannot be classified by the interventionist in any of the above categories. Will collapse the indeterminate probability of malignancy on visual assessment into low probability for malignancy.
Sensitivity of visual assessment of pleura for predicting malignancyUp to 1 yearDescriptive statistics (e.g., frequencies, ranges, means, medians, proportions, and SDs) along with 95% CIs for the means or proportions will be computed for the measures of interest. Sensitivity will be defined as TP divided by (TP + FN). High probability of malignancy is defined as presence of abnormalities, such as studding, presence of parietal or visceral masses or nodules, or abnormal tissue deposits consistent with malignancy. Low probability is defined as absence of abnormalities or presence of purulent, fibrino-purulent pleural fluid or parietal and/or visceral pleura inflammation or thickening. Indeterminate probability is defined as findings which cannot include or exclude malignancy with certainty, such as inflammation of the pleura or adhesions, but that cannot be classified by the interventionist in any of the above categories. Will collapse the indeterminate probability of malignancy on visual assessment into low probability for malignancy.
Positive predictive value (PPV) for all patientsUp to 1 yearPPV will be defined as TP divided by (TP + FP). Pre-test odds will be calculated using the formula: pre-test probability divided by (1 - pre-test probability). Post-test odds will be calculated using the formula: pre-test odds times likelihood ratio, and post-test probability was calculated using the formula: post-test odds divided by (1 + post-test odds). Likelihood ratios (LRs) will also be calculated by dividing the probability of a result in patients with the disease by the probability of the same result in patients without the disease.
Sensitivity of ROSE of preps for predicting malignancyUp to 1 yearDescriptive statistics (e.g., frequencies, ranges, means, medians, proportions, and SDs) along with 95% CIs for the means or proportions will be computed for the measures of interest. Sensitivity will be defined as true positive (TP) divided by (TP + false negative \[FN\]). High probability of malignancy is defined as adequate tissue with tumor present. Low probability of malignancy defined is adequate tissue with no tumor present. Indeterminate probability of malignancy is defined as presence of atypical cells but inadequate for a definitive diagnosis on ROSE. Will collapse the indeterminate probability of malignancy (atypical cells category) found on touch preps into low probability for malignancy bin and indeterminate probability of malignancy on visual assessment into low probability for malignancy.
Specificity of ROSE on touch preps between centersUp to 1 yearWill be compared between centers using Chi-squared and Fisher exact tests.
Sensitivity of ROSE on touch preps between centersUp to 1 yearWill be compared between centers using Chi-squared and Fisher exact tests.
Negative predictive value (NPV) for all patientsUp to 1 yearNPV will be defined as TN divided by (TN + FN). Pre-test odds will be calculated using the formula: pre-test probability divided by (1 - pre-test probability). Post-test odds will be calculated using the formula: pre-test odds times likelihood ratio, and post-test probability was calculated using the formula: post-test odds divided by (1 + post-test odds). LRs will also be calculated by dividing the probability of a result in patients with the disease by the probability of the same result in patients without the disease.

Countries

Cyprus, United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026