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Wk 1, Case 3 - Review

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0:00

60-year-old with elevated PSA of 6

0:03

and a firm prostate on exam.

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So we have the axial T2, the ADC map windowed at 1400.

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1400, the interpolated B equals 1600 axial series, and

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the arterial phase of the dynamic post-contrast series.

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So I always start by looking in the peripheral zone.

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In this case, the peripheral zone has

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kind of a heterogeneous appearance.

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It's got some areas of decreased T2

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signal, but nothing well-defined.

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And you kind of put that in your report because

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you're saying, "Hey, we're maybe decreasing

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the sensitivity a little bit because the

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peripheral zone isn't beautiful, right?"

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And if we look on the ADC map, we notice that the

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peripheral zone is pretty uniformly bright throughout.

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And there are some areas where it's a little bit dark.

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But when I window the ADC map at 1400,

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1400, I'm looking for black holes.

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On the ADC map to alert me, uh, to an

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area of diffusion restriction, and I

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want to see it look very, very focal.

1:01

And I use a cutoff ADC of a thousand, raise my

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red flags that this might be something that's

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going to be a PI-RADS 4 or a PI-RADS 5 lesion.

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The literature kind of supports using a

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value of 900, but I go up to a thousand.

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That way if it's a thousand and ten, I know

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I'm still above my cutoff, and I don't have

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to sort of move those goalposts all the time.

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So no diffusion restriction

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sitting in the peripheral zone.

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No errors of low T2 signal

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and nothing focally enhancing.

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There's a lot of diffuse

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enhancement, but nothing focal.

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So no lesions or suspicious

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errors in the peripheral zone.

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Now I move to the transition zone, and again

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it has this typical, organized chaos

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appearance of BPH as you go superiorly protrudes

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into the bladder base, and this is kind of normal.

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There's no areas of T2 signal abnormality

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that worry me in the transition zone.

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Next, we look at the central zone.

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The central zone is going to correspond like

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this region here, into here and here, and we

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go down to here, and if I open up the coronal

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images, we see the transition zone is here.

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So you notice here is that the

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transition zone is asymmetric.

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It's increased in size on the left, and

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it's larger than it is on the right.

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And if we look in the region of the

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ADC map, there is some focal diffusion

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restriction that's a little asymmetric.

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The ADC value measures at around

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850, if I remember correctly.

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Rectangle will be fine, right?

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So a mean of about 810, which is quite low, and

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it's equivocally bright on the high B value images.

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The high B value images can be difficult

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because they're relative signal intensities,

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and you can window things to be really

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bright and window things to be really dark.

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lesions based on diffusion in the peripheral zone,

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which for these purposes includes the central zone.

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Something has to be diffusion

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restricting on the ADC map, i.e.

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3:12

a black hole with these windows or ADC value less

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than a thousand and bright on the high B value images.

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And if it only meets one of those

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criteria, it gets a PI-RADS 3.

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And then if it enhances it can

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be bumped up to a PI-RADS 4.

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So in this case, because the finding was

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asymmetric and the ADC value was 800, which is

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well below my threshold of a thousand, I called

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it a PI-RADS 4 lesion, even though you could

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strongly argue it to be a PI-RADS 3 lesion.

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Now this person's PSA density was above 0.

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15, which means that a PI-RADS 4 or 3 would get

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a biopsy the way we were practicing at the time.

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So this was called a PI-RADS 4 lesion based

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on the diffusion restriction, kind of ignoring

4:00

the rules, and no contrast enhancement.

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And then when this was biopsied, we got

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benign tissue and some inflammation and the

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systematic, uh, biopsies did not show anything.

4:14

Uh, oops, we forgot, sorry, we jumped a little bit.

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We've got the anterior stroma.

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Here's a little bit of normal

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anterior stromal thickening.

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It's smooth.

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It kind of goes into the cleft between the

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two lobes of the transition zone, but it's

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not really insinuating between nodules.

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It's not showing any enhancement.

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Not showing any enhancement,

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it's pitch black, and that's normal tissue.

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Um, so, kind of the moral of this case is that,

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uh, when I see asymmetric, um, central zone,

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that, that's really diffusion restricting, I'll

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call that a lesion, with the caveat that it

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could represent asymmetric, um, central zone.

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Central zone normally can be low signal

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on T2 and diffusion restricting, so

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if it's symmetric, call it normal.

Report

Case Discussion

Case Report

Faculty

Daniel Cornfeld, MD

Chief Radiologist

Mātai

Stephen Currin, MD

Radiologist

IMED

Evan Allgood, MD

Abdominal Radiologist

Beverly Radiology Medical Group

Tags

Prostate/seminal vesicles

MRI

Genitourinary (GU)

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