Interactive Transcript
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A case of a 50-year-old with a
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PSA 4 and no urinary symptoms.
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On the images I've brought up the axial T2 images, an axial
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ADC map windowed at 1400, 1400, a high b-value image with
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a b-value of 1600, and since this case does not have post
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contrast images, I've just pulled up a coronal T2 image.
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So the first thing you notice in this case.
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Um, is that there is this large low-signal
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mass in the anterior peripheral zone.
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So in many glands there is peripheral zone
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tissue anteriorly in the mid and apical gland.
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This is going to be the transition
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zone and here's the peripheral zone.
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If you look on the diffusion images,
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so the ADC map and the high b-value.
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We have this well-defined black
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hole, so it's very dark on ADC.
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The ADC values are quite low.
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If we measure them, they're going to be in the
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600s, so it's very low, 666, not a good number.
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And it's high signal on the high b-value, and it's
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much higher signal than the remainder of the gland.
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It's the only part of the gland that really has high signal.
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These images can be difficult to window because
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Uh, they're not absolute values, and sometimes you
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can make things that are just a little bit high
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signal look very high signal by having very narrow
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windows, but in this case, there's no confusion.
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The rest of the gland is dark, and this is quite
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bright, uh, so being high signal on the high
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b-value, and very low signal on the ADC map.
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And again, my cutoff tends to be about a thousand,
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which looks like a black hole when windowed like this.
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That gives you a score of either a PI-RADS
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4 or PI-RADS 5 in the peripheral zone.
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And since the abnormality is greater than 1.
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5 centimeters, in this case, it's PI-RADS 5.
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So this is going to be a PI-RADS 5 lesion.
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The diffusion characteristics outrank
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everything else in the peripheral zone.
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Um, so, um, Although, it also gets a PI-RADS 5
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for T2 in this case, but it's not that important.
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The remainder of the peripheral zone is
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uniformly bright on the ADC map and dark on the
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high b-value image, so no other focal lesions.
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We move to the transition zone, which is small and
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has a typical appearance of the transition zone.
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The tumor is probably invading
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the transition zone posteriorly.
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We've already mentioned it in the
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peripheral zone, so we don't need to again.
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We have some central zone tissue here and
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here, which you can also see here and here.
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Posteriorly in the gland, so
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transition zone tissue go anteriorly.
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You have the tumor, um, and the
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anterior stroma looks normal.
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It's not thickened at all.
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Uh, so we have this PI-RADS 5 lesion.
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It does not look like there's macroscopic.
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Extracapsular invasion.
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There may be some microscopic invasion.
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It's difficult to tell, but we're really looking
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to document macroscopic extracapsular spread.
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We also need to look for tumor in the
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seminal vesicles, of which there's none.
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There's no abnormal soft tissue along
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the course of the neurovascular bundle.
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So here and here, we wouldn't
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expect that with an anterior tumor.
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There's no evidence of any invasion to the rectum.
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Also, it's an anterior tumor.
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We would not expect that.
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So it's a pretty straightforward case with a suspected
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high-grade PI-RADS 5 lesion in the anterior gland.
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And if we look and see what the biopsy results
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of this were, sixth core is all 3 plus 4 disease.
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So anterior significant prostate cancer.
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