Upcoming Events
Log In
Pricing
Free Trial

Wk 3, Case 4 - Review

HIDE
PrevNext

0:00

This is a case of a 69-year-old with

0:03

a PSA of 7 and no urinary symptoms.

0:06

We have our axial T2, axial

0:08

ADC map, and axial high B value.

0:11

It's a 1600 interpolated image

0:14

and an early arterial phase image.

0:17

And we'll start by just noticing that the ADC map

0:20

and the high B value image are pretty low quality.

0:24

And I know when I see a case that's got low quality

0:27

ADC map and high B value that it's going to be hard.

0:31

And I may not do as good a job as I

0:34

normally would because those are the

0:35

key sequences in the peripheral zone.

0:38

And when they don't look really

0:39

nice, your confidence goes down.

0:41

So if you feel the same way, you

0:44

know, you got good company here.

0:46

So we'll start in the peripheral zone.

0:47

So in the T2 images, the peripheral zone is a

0:50

little heterogeneous, got some streaky areas.

0:53

Uh, but I don't see a mass that I

0:55

feel like I could pluck off the page.

0:57

Maybe there's a little bit of

0:58

decreased signal down in this region.

1:00

We'll look over on the ADC map, and corresponding

1:02

to this area here, there is a focal black hole,

1:06

um, on the ADC map, and it's not letting me draw

1:10

a circle and show you, uh, what the ADC value was.

1:13

If we look kind of back in the report

1:15

for this, the ADC value was 700, right?

1:20

1000 threshold that I like to use.

1:21

It makes you worry about something

1:23

being a PI-RADS 4 or 5 lesion.

1:26

Given its size, less than a

1:28

centimeter, it's going to be a 4.

1:29

The problem is it's not bright

1:31

on the high B value image.

1:35

Maybe it's a little bright, but it's not.

1:38

Is there a focal contrast enhancement?

1:40

I don't think you can say that there is.

1:42

Um, and then, is there even

1:44

something there on the T2 image?

1:45

Well, towards the apex, sometimes the axial

1:47

images cannot be as sensitive because the gland

1:51

curves around and you're kind of imaging in plane.

1:54

If you look on a coronal image, in

1:56

this region, so let's scroll back.

1:59

Now there is some abnormal T2 signal in the area.

2:03

It's a bit wedge-shaped, um, on T2, but

2:07

it looks focal on the ADC map.

2:10

So, if we were going strictly by PIRADS,

2:13

this should be called a PIRADS 3 lesion.

2:15

There's a well-defined area of diffusion

2:17

restriction on the ADC map that's not

2:20

corroborated on the high B value images,

2:24

and there's no enhancement, so it's a, no

2:27

focal enhancement, so it's a PI-RADS 3.

2:30

Um, This case I think was read before we were

2:34

using PIRADS, so this lesion was biopsied.

2:37

This came back as a Gleason 3

2:39

plus 3 or Gleason 6 disease.

2:42

And even if you thought there was some enhancement

2:44

here and upgraded to a 4, it would still have come

2:48

back as a Gleason 6 disease, Gleason 6 neoplasm.

2:52

So the thing to remember is that the role of

2:55

MR, right, is to reduce the number of men who

2:58

are getting a biopsy, not eliminate, and also to

3:00

help correlate, you know, the size and location

3:03

of a cancer with what you get on the biopsy.

3:05

All right, so not everything you call PIRADS4 is

3:08

going to be a significant neoplasm, and that's okay.

3:12

In fact, hopefully you'll miss a lot of PIRADS,

3:14

sorry, you'll miss a lot of Gleason 6s, because

3:16

we don't always even want to see those, and

3:19

hopefully that the number of Gleason 6s that

3:21

you biopsy from PI-RADS 4 lesions will be small.

3:25

So, here's an example of where the diffusion

3:27

really makes you call this at least a, a PI-RADS 3.

3:32

Um, I've been fooled a lot of times by the

3:35

starkness of the black hole on the ADC map

3:38

and not seeing anything on the high B value.

3:41

And I've caught a lot of those 4s

3:43

when I should have called them 3s.

3:45

And almost all of those, even if they

3:46

come back as Gleason 6s, or as nothing.

3:49

So even after, you know, 20 years of doing this,

3:52

you still sometimes find yourself struggling

3:54

a little bit on these hard ones, and it always

3:56

seems to be in the cases where the ADC map and

3:59

the high B value images are pretty low quality.

4:02

So moving on from the peripheral

4:04

zone, we have the transition zone.

4:06

The transition zone is heterogeneous, it's

4:09

low signal, there's nothing lenticular.

4:11

There's nothing pushing things out of the way.

4:14

Um, this is a nice example of some anterior stroma.

4:18

So again, right, it's chrysentric.

4:20

It's not lenticular.

4:22

It's not pushing this.

4:23

It's not, you know, going like this.

4:24

Flattening the anterior transition zone.

4:26

It does show low signal on the ADC map.

4:29

It doesn't show high signal on the high B value.

4:32

But again, the quality is not that good.

4:34

But most importantly, it shows no enhancement.

4:37

Alright, so this is spanning the entire anterior

4:40

aspect of the transition zone like the stroma does.

4:43

There's no enhancement early.

4:44

If I showed you the delayed images,

4:46

there'd be no enhancement late.

4:47

Uh, this is a nice example of 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)

© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.

Contact UsTerms of UsePrivacy Policy