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[Preprint]. 2023 Nov 23:2023.11.22.23298915. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2023.11.22.23298915

Navigational Bronchoscopy versus Computed Tomography-guided Transthoracic Needle Biopsy for the Diagnosis of Indeterminate Lung Nodules: protocol and rationale for the VERITAS multicenter randomized trial

Robert J Lentz, Katherine Frederick-Dyer, Virginia B Planz, Tatsuki Koyama, Matthew C Aboudara, Briana Swanner, Lance Roller, See-Wei Low, Cristina Salmon, Sameer K Avasarala, Todd C Hoopman, Momen M Wahidi, Kamran Mahmood, George Z Cheng, James M Katsis, Jonathan S Kurman, Pierre-François D’Haese, Joyce Johnson, Eric L Grogan, Charla Walston, Lonny Yarmus, Gerard A Silvestri, Otis B Rickman, Najib M Rahman, Fabien Maldonado
PMCID: PMC10690353  PMID: 38045245

ABSTRACT

Background

Lung nodule incidence is increasing. Many nodules require biopsy to discriminate between benign and malignant etiologies. The gold-standard for minimally invasive biopsy, computed tomography-guided transthoracic needle biopsy (CT-TTNB), has never been directly compared to navigational bronchoscopy, a modality which has recently seen rapid technological innovation and is associated with improving diagnostic yield and lower complication rate. Current estimates of the diagnostic utility of both modalities are based largely on non-comparative data with significant risk for selection, referral, and publication biases.

Methods

The VERITAS trial (na V igation E ndoscopy to R each Indeterminate lung nodules versus T ransthoracic needle A spiration, a randomized controlled S tudy) is a multicenter, 1:1 randomized, parallel-group trial designed to ascertain whether electromagnetic navigational bronchoscopy with integrated digital tomosynthesis is noninferior to CT-TTNB for the diagnosis of peripheral lung nodules 10-30 mm in diameter with pre-test probability of malignancy of at least 10%. The primary endpoint is diagnostic accuracy through 12 months follow-up. Secondary endpoints include diagnostic yield, complication rate, procedure duration, need for additional invasive diagnostic procedures, and radiation exposure.

Discussion

The results of this rigorously designed trial will provide high-quality data regarding the management of lung nodules, a common clinical entity which often represents the earliest and most treatable stage of lung cancer. Several design challenges are described. Notably, all nodules are centrally reviewed by an independent interventional pulmonology and radiology adjudication panel relying on pre-specified exclusions to ensure enrolled nodules are amenable to sampling by both modalities while simultaneously protecting against selection bias favoring either modality. Conservative diagnostic yield and accuracy definitions with pre-specified criteria for what non-malignant findings may be considered diagnostic were chosen to avoid inflation of estimates of diagnostic utility.

Trial registration

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04250194

Full Text Availability

The license terms selected by the author(s) for this preprint version do not permit archiving in PMC. The full text is available from the preprint server.


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