# Percutaneous Transplant Liver Biopsies: Does Biopsy Needle Gauge Matter?

**Authors:** Kiyon Naser-Tavakolian, Connie Liou, Abin Sajan, Asad Baig, Hannah Bae, Lindsay Young, John Filtes, Sidney Brejt, Joshua L Weintraub, Stephen P Reis

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.94978 · 2025-10-20

## TL;DR

This study found that using larger biopsy needles (17/18G) in liver transplants leads to better sample quality than smaller ones (19/20G), with low complication rates.

## Contribution

The study provides evidence on the impact of biopsy needle gauge on sample adequacy in liver transplant biopsies.

## Key findings

- 17/18G needles had significantly fewer inadequate samples compared to 19/20G needles.
- The complication rate was low, with only one clinically significant bleeding event.
- No significant difference was found in the number of cores taken between the two needle sizes.

## Abstract

Introduction

This study evaluates coaxial core needle size (17/18G vs 19/20G) and sample adequacy in liver transplant biopsies.

Materials and methods

This was an Institutional Review Board (IRB)-approved retrospective study of 397 percutaneous transplant liver biopsies performed over four years with 17G/18G or 19G/20G coaxial and core needles. Medical records were reviewed for needle size, number of cores, tract embolization, complications, and sample adequacy by pathology. Statistical significance was determined using a combination of t-tests and chi-squared tests with a significance level less than 0.05.

Results

There were 257 18G core biopsies and 140 20G biopsies. Sample inadequacy was noted in 3/257 of the 18G biopsies and 19/140 of the 20G biopsies (p<0.0001). The mean number of cores taken was 3.17±0.72 and 3.06±0.81 for 18G and 20G biopsies, respectively (p=0.14). There was no significant difference between the two groups regarding the number of cores taken in the adequate or inadequate samples. Tract embolization was performed in 353/397 biopsies. One clinically significant bleeding complication was noted in a procedure done with a 20G needle with two core biopsies. No other major complications were noted.

Conclusion

Random transplant liver biopsies performed with coaxial 17G/18G core biopsy needles are more likely to provide adequate results than biopsies performed with 19G/20G needles. The risk of complications in transplant liver biopsies is low.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** bleeding (MESH:D006470)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12631704