A prospective randomised study of a rotary powered device (OnControl) for bone marrow aspiration and biopsy

IntroductionBone marrow aspiration and biopsy is an invasive procedure associated with morbidity and mortality risk. We compared a powered bone marrow aspiration and biopsy device to the traditional method by relatively assessing pain scores, procedure times, biopsy capture rates, quality of materia...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical pathology 2011-09, Vol.64 (9), p.809-813
Hauptverfasser: Swords, Ronan T, Anguita, Javier, Higgins, Russell A, Yunes, Andrea C, Naski, Michael, Padmanabhan, Swaminathan, Kelly, Kevin R, Mahalingam, Devalingam, Philbeck, Thomas, Miller, Larry, Puga, Tatiana A, Giles, Francis J, Kinney, Marsha C, Brenner, Andrew J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:IntroductionBone marrow aspiration and biopsy is an invasive procedure associated with morbidity and mortality risk. We compared a powered bone marrow aspiration and biopsy device to the traditional method by relatively assessing pain scores, procedure times, biopsy capture rates, quality of material retrieved, and safety and operator satisfaction.MethodsTwo large academic medical centres participated in this trial. Patients were randomised to have procedures carried out using the powered system or the manual technique. A visual analogue scale pain score was recorded immediately following skin puncture and once again at the end of the procedure for each patient. Procedure time was measured from skin puncture to core specimen acquisition. Pathologic assessment of 30 randomised samples was carried out. Operator satisfaction with devices was measured on a scale of 0–10, with 10 as the highest rating.ResultsFive operators from two sites enrolled 50 patients (powered, n=25; manual, n=25). Groups were evenly matched, with no significant differences in the means for age, weight and height. The powered system was superior to the manual system with respect to patient perceived pain from needle insertion (2.6±2.0 vs 4.1±2.5, p=0.022) and procedural time (100.0±72.8 s vs 224.1±79.0 s, p
ISSN:0021-9746
1472-4146
DOI:10.1136/jclinpath-2011-200047