Overview
To learn if LADS is better than VESPA at preventing atelectasis during a robotic bronchoscopy.
Description
Primary Objective:
To compare the proportion of patients developing target-obscuring atelectasis when using a lateral decubitus strategy (LADS) vs using a ventilatory strategy to prevent atelectasis (VESPA) during robotic bronchoscopy for posteriorly-located peripheral lung lesions.
Secondary Objectives:
- To compare the proportion of patients with atelectasis in the target lobe in VESPA vs. LADS during robotic bronchoscopy.
- To compare the proportion of patients with atelectasis obscuring 100%, 50% or more, and less than 50% of the target during robotic bronchoscopy using LADS vs. VESPA.
- To compare the proportion of patients in whom a biopsy sample was not taken due to atelectasis using LADS vs. VESPA.
- To compare the diagnostic yield using LADS vs. VESPA.
- To compare the proportion of tool in lesion (TIL) using LADS vs. VESPA.
- To compare the diagnostic accuracy (sensitivity and specificity) for malignancy using LADS vs. VESPA.
- To compare the proportion of LADS-induced vs. VESPA-induced complications.
- To compare the proportion of bronchoscopy-induced complications in LADS vs. VESPA.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Adult patients (≥ 18 years old) undergoing diagnostic robotic bronchoscopy for a lung nodule suspicious for malignancy bronchoscopy under general anesthesia.
- Lung nodules should be up to 3 cm in diameter and located in right or left bronchial segments B2, B6, B9, and B10. Greater than 50% of the volume of the lesion needs to be below a horizontal line traced at the most anterior edge of the corresponding vertebral body.
- Chest CT performed < 4 weeks prior to bronchoscopy.
- Voluntary informed consent to participate in the study.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients with prior lung consolidation, interstitial changes or lung masses (> 3 cm in diameter) as seen on most recent CT
- Lesions outside of the designated lung areas defined as inclusion criteria.
- Known pregnancy
- Vulnerable population
- Ascites
- Known diaphragmatic paralysis
- Smokers or ex-smokers with known or suspected severe air-trapping defined as residual volume > 150% of predicted
- History of primary or secondary spontaneous pneumothorax
- Lung bullae > 5 cm
- Patients with mediastinal or hilar adenopathy with high suspicion for malignancy in whom lymph node sampling is indicated and should occur prior to robotic bronchoscopy of the peripheral lesion.
- Patient with active COVID pneumonia.