Abstract
Computed tomography (CT)-guided biopsies of 20 patients with hilar masses were performed after nondiagnostic bronchoscopic examination. Bronchoscopy included washings, brushings, routine biopsy, and, in many cases, transbronchial biopsy. In all but one case (95%), biopsy with a 22-gauge needle permitted a cytologic diagnosis of malignancy. In 14 of the 19 cases (74%), a diagnosis of primary lung carcinoma involving the hili was made, and in the remaining five of the 19 (26%), metastatic hilar adenopathy from an extrathoracic primary tumor was identified. A pneumothorax rate consistent with our average rate for CT-guided biopsies (25%) was obtained, and only one patient required chest tube placement. In this series, CT-guided biopsies of hilar masses were more consistently successful in obtaining tissue for diagnosis than were bronchoscopic biopsies. Transthoracic needle aspiration biopsy may be the preferred initial diagnostic procedure in many patients with hilar masses.