When caught early, lung cancer can often be successfully treated. The problem, however, is that there typically aren’t any symptoms in its early stages. That makes the early detection of lung cancer all the more important.
One way to achieve
this is by screening those who are at high risk for lung cancer (people over
age 50 who smoked one pack of cigarettes per day for 20 years or half a pack
per day for 40 years) with an annual low-dose computed tomography (CT) scan.
If the CT scan finds
an abnormality in a patient’s lungs, a bronchoscopy is generally recommended.
During this common procedure, a doctor guides a thin tube equipped with a light
and camera (bronchoscope) through the patient’s mouth or nose and into the
lungs to obtain a tissue sample.
But there have been
advances. Today, Yale Medicine physicians use a new form of technology called
“robotic bronchoscopy,” which allows them to better reach smaller parts of the
lungs. During a robotic bronchoscopy, the doctor uses a controller at a
console to operate a robotic arm, which then guides the bronchoscope’s thin,
flexible tube through the airways.
“With the regular
bronchoscope, we can reach 20 to 30% of the airways, but with the robotic
bronchoscope, we can reach 95% or more,” says Christopher Morton, MD, a Yale
Medicine interventional pulmonologist. “The precision of the robot allows the
tube to navigate tight turns and hard-to-reach areas of the lungs in order to
obtain a biopsy of the lung tissue.”
But neither type of
bronchoscopy is able to collect a sample from lymph nodes around the lungs and
airways, which are important places to check for cancer and to determine if it
has spread.
For that, doctors
will perform an endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS) immediately after the
bronchoscopy. The EBUS scope is similar to the bronchoscope, except that it has
an ultrasound at its tip, which lets doctors see lymph nodes and guide a small
needle to obtain a sample.
“The advantage of
doing both the robotic bronchoscopy and the EBUS at the same time is that we
get the most amount of information to accurately diagnose and stage the lung
cancer with a low risk, and it is all done within one procedure,” explains Erin
DeBiasi, MD, a Yale Medicine interventional pulmonologist.
With this information, doctors can quickly develop and implement any necessary treatment plan.
Source: How Robotic
Bronchoscopy Helps Diagnose Lung Cancer > News > Yale Medicine
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