Interactive Transcript
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The following is, uh, a patient with
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cirrhosis who presents for screening,
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uh, for hepatocellular carcinoma.
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So for this case, it's best to go straight
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to the, uh, post-contrast imaging sequences
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that I have up here, and we're going to scroll
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downwards, and I want to focus on a lesion
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seen in the right hepatic lobe, inferiorly.
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So here we have T1, post-contrast,
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FAT SAT, arterial phase, uh, image.
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This is the portal venous phase image.
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This is the delayed or equilibrium phase images.
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And at least if we sort of look at
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these images side by side as we're doing
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over here, I want you to focus on this
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lesion right by the gallbladder fossa.
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This would be around segment 5.
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This lesion over here.
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And it really manifests best
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as a focal area of washout.
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If we were to look at it on the portal
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venous phase, yeah, we see a little
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bit over here, but not as nicely.
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If we look at it in the arterial
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phase, there's really no arterial phase
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hyperenhancement associated with it.
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So if we look at the, uh, LI-RADS lexicon
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and go through our table, you know, we have a
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lesion with no arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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We measure the size, we can measure it
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from here to here, and I'll tell you that
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this lesion is less than 20 millimeters.
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So it's a small lesion, no arterial
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phase hyperenhancement, and the
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only other secondary feature that
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this has is the presence of washout.
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When we say washout, the internal
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signal is less than the signal
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of the adjacent liver parenchyma.
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And as we work through our LI-RADS table,
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this will then qualify as a LI-RADS 3 lesion.
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And if you recall with LI-RADS 3 lesions, this
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is a patient who would then return for another
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imaging study in about three to six months from
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now to follow up the imaging appearance of this.
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So there are two other liver
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lesions in this patient,
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which have somewhat similar imaging
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features, however, are staged differently
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according to the LI-RADS lexicon.27 00:01:05,675 --> 00:01:08,085 So if we look at the, uh, LI-RADS lexicon
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and go through our table, you know, we have a
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lesion with no arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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We measure the size, we can measure it
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from here to here, and I'll tell you that
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this lesion is less than 20 millimeters.
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So it's a small lesion, no arterial
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phase hyperenhancement, and the
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only other secondary feature that
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this has is the presence of washout.
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When we say washout, the internal
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signal is less than the signal
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of the adjacent liver parenchyma.
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And as we work through our LI-RADS table,
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this will then qualify as a LI-RADS 3 lesion.
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And if you recall with LI-RADS 3 lesions, this
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is a patient who would then return for another
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imaging study in about three to six months from
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now to follow up the imaging appearance of this.
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So there are two other liver
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lesions in this patient,
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which have somewhat similar imaging
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features, however, are staged differently
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according to the LI-RADS lexicon.
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Again, we have our arterial phase images,
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portal venous phase images, equilibrium
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phase images, and we've scrolled a few
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slices lower than where we were previously.
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We can see that there are
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lesions, again, in segment 5.
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You can see them over here, these two
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lesions, and they're not associated with
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any arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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If you measure them, unlike the
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other lesion, these ones are actually
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greater or equal to 20 millimeters.
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Like the other lesion, there
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is washout within this.
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And so, based on the fact that its size
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is more than 20 millimeters, this will
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actually bump it up to a LI-RADS 4 category.
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This is the sort of lesion which would then
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go to a multidisciplinary conference to be
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discussed, uh, potentially biopsied if, if
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possible, or, um, get short-term follow-up.
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