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Wk 1, Case 4 - Review

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A 65-year-old with a PSA of 6.5, a benign gland on

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exam, obstructive urinary symptoms, and most

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importantly, multiple prior negative biopsies.

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

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The B equals 1600 interpolated B value image.

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And this is actually a delayed late phase

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post-contrast series, not the early phase.

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But I'll explain later why I'm showing this picture.

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So again, I always start within the peripheral zone.

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And here the peripheral zone is

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uniformly or near-uniformly T2 bright.

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There's a small error of heterogeneity.

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On the ADC map, the peripheral

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zone is almost uniformly bright.

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There is no focal area of well-defined diffusion restriction.

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This looks like one, but if we look ahead,

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we're going to see that it's actually going to

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be a nodule in the transition zone, so we're

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not going to put that in the peripheral zone.

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So nothing suspicious in the peripheral zone.

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So next, we'll jump to the transition zone, and the

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transition zone here has this multi-nodular appearance.

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And these are all kind of normal.

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There are some nodules, but they're well-defined.

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They have well-defined margins.

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Uh, it's all normal fun, and it's gonna

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be some low signal in the stroma that

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goes between the left and right lobes.

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And if we go very high, the transition

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zone protrudes into the bladder base.

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There's one area I'm gonna call

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attention to, which is right here.

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So this has all the appearances

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of a neoplasm in the transition zone.

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It's well-defined lenticular-shaped

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low T2 signal and it's anterior.

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And you might be tempted to say, well, this is anterior

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stroma, but it's not where the anterior stroma is.

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This is transition zone.

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This is the anterior part of the peripheral zone.

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You can see it's all the way bright around here.

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So anterior stroma is going to be located anteriorly.

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So, so this is not anterior stroma.

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This is a PI-RADS 5 lesion in the peripheral zone.

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Sorry, in the transition zone.

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Uh, it's gonna measure more than 1.5 centimeters in diameter.

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That's why it's a PI-RADS 5 lesion.

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It's well-defined, low T2 signal, lenticular-shaped,

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and very much stands out from the remainder of the transition zone.

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Now the T2 appearance alone allows you to call

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it a PI-RADS 5 lesion, but you'll also notice it

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is well-defined on the ADC map as a black hole.

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The ADC value of this was low.

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It measures a mean of 630, which is

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very low, and it's also focally bright

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on the high B-value image.

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And so this is a PI-RADS 5 lesion in the transition zone.

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And if we scroll throughout the remainder

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of the prostate, there's nothing else that

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looks suspicious in the transition zone.

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All right.

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We can very quickly look at the central

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zone because we should always do that.

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So I need to bring up the coronal images

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and still on the wrong window here.

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So we have transition zone, sorry, um,

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central zone, not very well seen here.

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So now this area corresponds on the axial images

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to what we called was the PI-RADS 5 lesion.

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And this area anteriorly is going to be thickened stroma.

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So let's look at that thickened stroma on the axial images.

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That's here.

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So a couple of things to notice that differentiate that.

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from the transition zone, PI-RADS 5, highly

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suspicious for neoplasm that we saw.

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One is, this is actually located along the anterior

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margin of the gland, so here's Transition zone, and

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this is outside the prostate, so it's not located

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between the transition zone and the peripheral zone.

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Second, it crosses the midline, it's very

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smooth, and it almost just looks like

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thickening of the anterior margin of the gland.

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It's not avidly restricting diffusion.

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It really has no appearance on the high B-value,

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although sometimes, It can be dark on here

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and bright on here, but in this case it's not.

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And in addition, it shows no enhancement.

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So here it is here, and here it corresponds

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to this dark rim right here on the delayed

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post-contrast images, no enhancement.

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If you look at the tumor, the suspected

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tumor, that is enhancing, right?

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So if I saw something like this in the anterior

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stroma, I'd be worried it was neoplasm.

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But remember, this isn't where

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the anterior stroma is located.

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This is where the transition zone is located.

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So, we do the rest of our check.

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The seminal vesicles are completely atretic.

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There's nothing in them.

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There's no abnormal soft tissue sitting

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where the neurovascular bundles are.

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The angles between the rectum and

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the prostate aren't obliterated.

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That kind of makes sense.

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This tumor is anterior.

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When this was biopsied, this came back as

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four cores with Gleason 3 plus 4 disease.

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So, that's a significant cancer, and the reason this person

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had a normal palpating gland is the tumor's anterior.

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You palpate the gland, you palpate posterior, and the

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reason they had multiple prior negative systematic

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biopsies is this is an anterior tumor, and when you

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do transrectal systematic biopsies, the needle comes

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from the back, and the needles are often only 1.5

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centimeters long.

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This part of the gland would not have been sampled.

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Okay, so in summary, we have a PI-RADS 5 lesion that had

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a concordant positive biopsy finding, which is distinct

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from an area of normal appearing anterior stroma.

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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