Interactive Transcript
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This is a 74-year-old with a PSA rising to 7.
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For images, we have axial T2, axial ADC map,
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windowed as a standard, a sagittal image,
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uh, and a delayed post-contrast image.
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I don't have a high B-value for this case.
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You'll note that in the sagittal image, it's not great.
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Uh, we forgot to put on a phase oversampling,
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and the SAT band that's normally anterior.
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Uh, it's too far posterior, so the anterior
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abdominal wall is wrapped, but we can still
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see the prostate, so it gets the job done.
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Uh, we start in the peripheral zone, and we'll,
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this time we'll start, um, in the, on the ADC
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map, which is probably where you should start.
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And bright, bright, bright, we'll
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go back up, bright, bright, bright.
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This area kind of catches my eye, some asymmetry.
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It's not quite a black hole, the ADC
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measured a little bit above a thousand.
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But it's asymmetric, it is focal,
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there is some corresponding low T2 signal.
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Is it spiculated and wedge-shaped, or is
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it more well-demarcated and mass-like?
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You could debate.
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Um, in the absence of a, um, high B-value, I can't
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say if it's spiculated present on the high B-value.
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But since the ADC is above 1000, probably the highest
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PI-RADS score I'm going to give it based on diffusion is a 3.
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So it's a 3 for diffusion, a 3 or 4 for T2.
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We don't know what it is for early enhancement,
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so it ends up being a PI-RADS 3 lesion.
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If it's a PI-RADS 3 on diffusion and enhances
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on the arterial phase, it gets bumped to a 4.
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We've talked about that before.
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This is a PI-RADS 3 lesion.
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It was biopsied and it's normal tissue.
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And you can probably talk yourself into this being a wedge-
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shaped area of diffusion restriction, in which case it's
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a PI-RADS 2, and you can make this wedge-shaped as well.
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Uh, and then, it's a PI-RADS 2, it doesn't get biopsied.
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It's not a perfect system.
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So no additional areas of focal diffusion restriction.
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In the peripheral zone, so that's quite good.
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We look at the transition zone, and the transition zone
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posteriorly looks okay, but anteriorly, there's this
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thickened, cross-centric area, a very low signal, and
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it's not lenticular-shaped, it's bilaterally symmetric,
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it's not, you know, it's not pushing things out of the way.
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Alright, this is still convex.
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But it enhances.
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If it enhances, it can't be normal anterior stroma.
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So, this was given a PI-RADS score of 5 based
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on its diameter, no greater than 2 centimeters,
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and its support of poorly defined low T2 signal.
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Uh, the ADC value is actually 500, which is also, you know,
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pretty reassuring that we're dealing with a neoplasm here.
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And at an ADC that low, you think of a high-grade neoplasm.
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This came back multiple cores
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of Gleason 3 plus 3 disease.
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And that actually surprises me because given
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the very low ADC value, I would have thought it
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would have been a much more aggressive tumor.
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Um, so the reason this is not anterior stroma.
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is the enhancement.
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Now granted, this would be pretty
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thick to be anterior stroma.
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And if it didn't enhance and had this appearance, I would
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have a very hard time knowing what to do with this case.
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And probably out of fear of missing something
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aggressive, given the ADC values of 500,
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I would have called it a PI-RADS 5 anyway.
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And that's kind of breaking the
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rules, but that's not the case.
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It enhances, it's not anterior stroma.
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It's a, it's a PI-RADS 5 lesion in the transition zone.
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