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First‐in‐human use of a new robotic electromagnetic navigation bronchoscopic platform with integrated Tool‐in‐Lesion Tomosynthesis (<scp>TiLT</scp>) technology for peripheral pulmonary lesions: The <scp>FRONTIER</scp> study

Tajalli Saghaie, Jonathan Williamson, Martin J. Phillips, Dona Kafili, Sarika Sundar, D. Kyle Hogarth, Alvin Ing

2024Respirology31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: As the presentation of pulmonary nodules increases, the importance of a safe and accurate method of sampling peripheral pulmonary nodules is highlighted. First-generation robotic bronchoscopy has successfully assisted navigation and improved peripheral reach during bronchoscopy. Integrating tool-in-lesion tomosynthesis (TiLT) may further improve yield. METHODS: We performed a first-in-human clinical trial of a new robotic electromagnetic navigation bronchoscopy system with integrated digital tomosynthesis technology (Galaxy System, Noah Medical). Patients with moderate-risk peripheral pulmonary nodules were enrolled in the study. Robotic bronchoscopy was performed using electromagnetic navigation with TiLT-assisted lesion guidance. Non-specific results were followed up until either a clear diagnosis was achieved or repeat radiology at 6 months demonstrated stability. RESULTS: Eighteen patients (19 nodules) were enrolled. The average lesion size was 20 mm, and the average distance from the pleura was 11.6 mm. The target was successfully reached in 100% of nodules, and the biopsy tool was visualized inside the target lesion in all cases. A confirmed specific diagnosis was achieved in 17 nodules, 13 of which were malignant. In one patient, radiological monitoring confirmed a true non-malignant result. This translates to a yield of 89.5% (strict) to 94.7% (intermediate). Complications included one pneumothorax requiring observation only and another requiring an overnight chest drain. There was one case of severe pneumonia following the procedure. CONCLUSION: In this first-in-human study, second-generation robotic bronchoscopy using electromagnetic navigation combined with integrated digital tomosynthesis was feasible with an acceptable safety profile and demonstrated a high diagnostic yield for small peripheral lung nodules.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineTomosynthesisBronchoscopyRadiologyPneumothoraxSolitary pulmonary noduleLesionSurgeryComputed tomographyMammographyInternal medicineCancerBreast cancerLung Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentAdvanced Radiotherapy TechniquesPleural and Pulmonary Diseases