# Intraductal cryobiopsy via percutaneous cholangioscopy for biliary strictures: a multicenter feasibility study

**Authors:** Jan Peveling-Oberhag, Christian Gerges, Jörg Albert, Lukas Welsch, Philip Grunert, Gilbert Rahe, Alexander Dechene, Axel Eickhoff, Matthias Dettmer, Walter Linzenbold, Markus Enderle, Thomas Rösch, Katharina Zimmermann-Fraedrich

PMC · DOI: 10.1055/a-2728-8013 · 2025-12-19

## TL;DR

This study shows that a new biopsy method called intraductal cryobiopsy, used through a percutaneous cholangioscopy, can collect larger and better-quality tissue samples from biliary strictures than traditional methods.

## Contribution

The first feasibility study demonstrating intraductal cryobiopsy via percutaneous cholangioscopy for biliary stricture tissue sampling.

## Key findings

- Cryobiopsy produced significantly larger and more representative tissue samples compared to forceps biopsies.
- Cryobiopsy samples had higher histologic quality and fewer artifacts than forceps biopsies.
- The procedure was safe with no major adverse events reported.

## Abstract

Tissue diagnosis of biliary strictures is challenging and often requires multiple methods. Cryobiopsy, which is well established in bronchoscopy with high tissue yield, is presented here for the first time as a proof-of-principle feasibility study performed via the percutaneous route for biliary strictures.

Patients undergoing percutaneous cholangioscopy for intraductal diagnosis of biliary strictures underwent six forceps biopsies and three cryobiopsies in a randomized order. The main objective was to assess feasibility, defined as the retrieval of at least one adequate sample per method per patient.

Among 15 patients (53% women; mean age 60.2 years), all had at least one adequate sample obtained by each method. Cryobiopsy yielded significantly larger (8.54 vs. 1.87 mm
2
;
P
< 0.001) and more representative specimens (97.6% vs. 74.7%;
P
= 0.001). It also scored higher on overall histologic quality on a Likert scale of 0–6 (5 vs. 4;
P
< 0.001) and had more artifact-free areas (93.5% vs. 85.5%;
P
= 0.01). No bleeding or perforations occurred; only minor adverse events were reported and these resolved with standard treatment.

This feasibility study showed that intraductal cryobiopsy via percutaneous cholangioscopy yielded larger samples and may enable more detailed histologic assessment than forceps biopsies. Further studies will evaluate its accuracy, safety, and potential for use with peroral cholangioscopy during endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Biliary Strictures (MESH:D003251), perforations (MESH:D057112), bleeding (MESH:D006470)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13004657/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13004657