Interactive Transcript
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60-year-old with elevated PSA of 6
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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.
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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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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
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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.
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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.
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