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Wk 2, Case 3 - Review

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This is a case of a 75-year-old man with a PSA of 7 and a

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benign gland on physical exam and no urinary symptoms.

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So we go to the images and we have axial T2 images,

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an axial ADC map windowed at 1400 by 1400, an axial

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interpolated high B-value image with B of 1600.

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In this case, I have a delayed post-contrast image.

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It's not the arterial phase.

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Uh, and I will explain why I'm showing that a bit later.

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Uh, so we start with this case, we start looking

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at the peripheral zone, and even though, you

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know, the most information in the peripheral

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zone is on the diffusion images, I still, as a

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creature of habit, start looking at the T2 images.

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So, sort of up near the base of the gland, it's got a

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little bit of a heterogeneous appearance, you know, high.

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Now this here, if you corroborate on the coronal

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images, you'll see this is Central zone tissue,

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so I'm not going to worry about that right now.

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Peripheral zone, peripheral zone, what catches

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my eye here is, there's kind of this poorly

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defined wedge-shaped area of low T2 signal.

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That extends all the way out,

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uh, to the capsule of the gland.

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And this is one example where I look at, and

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I think this is going to be prostatitis.

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Then I look at the diffusion images,

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there's actually very low, uh, signal here.

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Kind of a black hole on these windows.

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And when I draw an ROI, measure what the ADC value is.

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It's below 900.

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And then when I look on the high

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B-value images, it's bright.

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So this meets criteria based on the

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diffusion images for a PI-RADS 4 lesion.

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Because we measure it, it measures less than 1.

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5 centimeters.

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If it were greater than 1.

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5 centimeters, it'd be a PI-RADS 5 lesion, right?

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Okay, uh, so this is one of those where based on the

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diffusion you have to call it PI-RADS 4 and it's

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going to get biopsied and this was biopsied and uh, 2

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out of 2 cores came back with Gleason 4 plus 3 disease.

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Uh, so you're not always happy calling

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these but you got to follow the rules.

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In one of the previous cases, Uh, we didn't get high

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grade cancer, and that's because not all PI-RADS 4

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lesions are going to be high grade cancer, but enough

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of them are that you need to biopsy them, right?

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Right.

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So if we look at the rest of the peripheral zone on

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the ADC map, uh, it's relatively high signal.

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There are no more focal areas of well

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defined low, low signal on the ADC map.

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So that's the only lesion in the peripheral zone.

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You go to the transition zone and it has this typical normal

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nodular appearance that you see with prostatic hypertrophy.

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Okay, and then we look at the anterior stroma, and

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this is an area that's the learning point on this case,

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and you're going to find that you end up biopsying

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a lot of anterior stroma before you really become

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comfortable saying what is anterior stroma, and

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what's an anterior transition zone suspicious finding.

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probably two and a half, three centimeters in diameter.

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It's crescentric, it insinuates,

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between nodules in the gland.

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It's got some low signal on the ADC map here

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with an ADC value of 870, so well below 1000.

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In this case, it's not terribly high signal on the

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high B-value image, but remember in the transition

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zone it's the T2 that matters and these images don't

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really, aren't supposed to sway you all that much.

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Uh, so this was, uh, called a suspicious PI-RADS 5 lesion,

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it was biopsied, it came back normal fibromuscular tissue.

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But as you get more experienced with anterior stroma, and

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you look at this, this looks like typical anterior stroma.

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It's located on the anterior part of the gland.

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Right?

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It tapers very narrowly on the edges.

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It insinuates between the nodules from the

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anterior side, but not so much laterally.

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Uh, it may have restricted diffusion.

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It's fibrous tissue, so diffusion is going to be restricted.

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But the key to me that this tissue

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is anterior stroma is that there's almost no

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enhancement either on the early or the late images.

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Uh, and when you see this enough and you've

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biopsied enough, you become confident that

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this is what anterior stroma looks like.

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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