Biopsy Principles

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Goals & Groundwork - Biopsy Blueprint

  • Goals of Biopsy:
    • Obtain adequate, representative tissue for precise histologic diagnosis.
    • Establish tumor type and grade accurately.
    • Secure material for ancillary studies (cytogenetics, molecular markers).
  • Essential Groundwork (Pre-Biopsy):
    • Thorough clinical assessment; high-quality imaging (X-ray, MRI essential; CT for cortical/matrix detail).
    • Complete systemic staging (CT Chest, Bone Scan) to rule out metastases.
    • Multidisciplinary Team (MDT) review: Ortho-Oncologist, Radiologist, Pathologist.
    • Strategic Biopsy Tract Planning:
      • Longitudinal incision, aligned with planned definitive surgical approach.
      • Prevent contamination: neurovasculars, uninvolved compartments, joints.
      • Entire tract excisable en bloc with tumor during definitive resection.
      • Meticulous hemostasis to prevent hematoma.

    ⭐ Biopsy: final staging step; after full imaging & MDT consensus, not the initial test.

Pelvic tumor biopsy trajectory planning

Incision Planning - Path to Precision

  • Goals: Maximize diagnostic yield; minimize tumor spillage, neurovascular injury, compromise to future surgery.
  • Incision Design:
    • Longitudinal, parallel to limb's long axis.
    • Direct, shortest path to lesion.
    • Avoid transverse incisions in limbs (compromises salvage).
  • Placement Principles:
    • Planned for en bloc excision with tumor at definitive surgery.
    • Incorporate prior biopsy tracts if well-sited.
    • Traverse one muscle compartment; use intermuscular planes.
    • Avoid major neurovascular structures & joints.
  • Key Techniques:
    • Smallest adequate incision.
    • Meticulous hemostasis (prevents hematoma, tumor spread).

⭐ The entire biopsy tract is considered contaminated and must be excised en bloc with the tumor during definitive surgery.

Biopsy Techniques - Choosing Your Weapon

  • Needle Biopsy: Minimally invasive.
    • FNAC (Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology): Rapid, cheap. Cells only. ↓Accuracy for sarcoma grading. Use: Recurrences, metastases, LABC (Lytic, Aggressive, Benign-appearing Cysts).
    • Core Needle Biopsy (CNB/Tru-Cut): Preferred for primary bone tumors. Preserves architecture, ↑accuracy vs FNAC. Image-guided (CT/USG) for deep lesions. Allows ancillary studies.
  • Open Biopsy: Higher morbidity. Use if needle biopsy non-diagnostic.
    • Incisional: Ample tissue. ↑Risk contamination/spillage. Longitudinal incision; tract excised with definitive surgery.
    • Excisional: Diagnostic & therapeutic for small, clearly benign lesions. Risk inadequate margins if malignant. Avoid for suspected malignancy.

⭐ Biopsy tract is contaminated; must be excised en-bloc with tumor during definitive surgery. Plan meticulously.

Core needle biopsy techniqueoka

Sample & Pitfalls - Handle With Care!

  • Specimen Handling: Key Steps
    • Fresh (unfixed) for: Cytogenetics, microbiology, flow cytometry.
    • Routine Histology/IHC: 10% Neutral Buffered Formalin.
    • Avoid crush & cautery artifacts. Label meticulously: Patient, site, date.
    • Orient specimen if margins critical (e.g., excisional biopsy).
  • Pathologist Collaboration:
    • Essential: Provide full clinical context, imaging, differential diagnoses.
    • Specify need for frozen section.
  • Common Pitfalls & Complications:
    • Sampling Error: Necrotic tissue, reactive zone only, insufficient material.
    • Hemorrhage, infection, iatrogenic fracture.
    • ⚠️ Tumor Seeding: Biopsy tract must be planned for future en-bloc excision.
    • Neurovascular injury.

⭐ The most common reason for a non-diagnostic bone tumor biopsy is sampling error (e.g., hitting only reactive zone or necrotic tissue).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Biopsy tract must be planned for en-bloc excision with definitive surgery.
  • Always use longitudinal incisions, avoiding transverse ones to facilitate future surgery.
  • Prevent neurovascular bundle contamination and intra-articular seeding at all costs.
  • Frozen section is vital for sample adequacy and guiding immediate surgical steps.
  • Core needle biopsy is often the preferred initial investigation; open incisional biopsy if inconclusive or for most primary sarcomas.
  • Meticulous hemostasis is critical to prevent hematoma formation and local tumor spread.
  • The surgeon performing definitive surgery should ideally perform or plan the biopsy.

Practice Questions: Biopsy Principles

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Which of the following is a differential of giant cell tumor?

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Flashcards: Biopsy Principles

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Lytic bony lesions in myeloma are seen most commonly in the _____.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Lytic bony lesions in myeloma are seen most commonly in the _____.

vertebrae (bone)

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