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Pancreatic Cyst Case 2

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0:01

Here we have a patient who is 78, and she's female.

0:07

78-year-old female.

0:08

Let me start showing you some of the images.

0:12

Start off with a T2 weighted image without fat sat.

0:18

Again, we're just going to focus on the pancreas over here.

0:23

This is a lesion over here,

0:29

rather a large lesion.

0:31

It can look a little bit complex.

0:36

This is a T2 fat-sat image, let's just have another look at it.

0:40

Scrolling all the way up and down through it.

0:46

T1 pre is what it looks like over here.

0:55

We have some post-contrast sequences I'd like to share with you.

0:58

Our arterial phase,

1:02

just going to pause here for a few seconds so you can have a look at it.

1:06

Portal venous phase,

1:13

delayed or equilibrium phase.

1:15

I'm going to scroll up and down through it

1:16

so you get a nice sense of the complexity of this lesion over here.

1:23

Finally, for completion's sake,

1:24

as we look at these MRs in- and out-of-phase, see the lesion here.

1:30

In the in-phase, it looks like this,

1:33

not much real objective change

1:35

between the two on the in- and out-of-phase.

1:38

That's the lesion.

1:40

There's DWI images as well over here if you want to look at it.

1:45

This is a higher b-value.

1:50

Once again, I'm going to finish off by showing you what I think are maybe

1:56

some of the more key images to evaluate this lesson, the T2

2:00

and the post-contrast over here.

2:05

This is a second unknown case.

2:08

We have the polling question to see what the group thinks.

2:11

The most likely diagnosis, I'm giving you some options here ranging

2:16

from a mucinous cystadenoma to a serous cystadenoma,

2:21

adenocarcinoma as well,

2:25

and then the SPEN tumor as well.

2:31

Whenever the moderator wants to close the pole,

2:33

we'll see what we think it is.

2:36

We're leading towards serous cystadenoma.

2:40

A few possibly thought it was a mucinous cystadenoma.

2:43

Nobody thought it's an adenocarcinoma, which is great,

2:44

and nobody thought it was just a SPEN, which is great.

2:46

We're really between those two.

2:48

Almost two-thirds thought it was serous, and one-third, mucinous.

2:52

That's great. Let's have a look at this lesion as well.

2:56

Here's the lesion on the T2 weighted images.

2:58

It's at the head of the pancreas, and geez, it's quite complex.

3:03

If you look at it, it looks like there's a small cyst here,

3:05

a small cyst here, a small cyst here, a small cyst here,

3:07

and there's just all clustered together to make up this large lesion.

3:12

Inside of it, it looks like centrally,

3:14

maybe there's a T2 hypointense focus.

3:16

I'm not sure if that'll be important, or not,

3:18

but that is certainly a part of the imaging appearance of this lesion.

3:22

T1 pres are not as useful.

3:24

They just show that there's no hyperintense

3:26

content necessarily within this.

3:28

The post-contrast sequence, it just showed to be quite a complex lesion.

3:32

I'll just go to the delayed phase images, I think,

3:35

which shows that the borders are somewhat lobulated.

3:38

If you were to take your finger and run

3:40

around the outer border, it wouldn't be smooth.

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It would be sort of lumpy bumpy as you go around it.

3:44

Internally, it has these reticulations.

3:47

The reticulations may reflect the walls

3:51

of these small cysts that are making this lesion up.

3:54

It's located at the head of the pancreas.

3:55

This happens to be, as I said, a lady in her late 70s,

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and so putting things together,

4:02

the best diagnosis would probably be a serous cystadenoma,

4:05

which is what this turned out to be.

4:07

I think it's really tough.

4:10

If you look at these pancreatic cystic lesions, in particular,

4:14

it's very tough to come up with a prospective diagnosis.

4:17

Even if you tell your providers, I think this is serous cystadenoma.

4:21

Well, guess what? They're probably,

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particularly, at this size, they're probably going to have to do

4:25

an endoscopic ultrasound to get some sampling

4:27

to make sure that that's exactly what it is,

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and it doesn't mimicking something else.

4:33

What do we need to know about serous cystadenoma as well?

4:36

Good news is that they're benign tumors.

4:39

This is a rather large tumor, maybe 4 centimeters in size,

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but it's going to be, statistically speaking, a benign tumor.

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Now, if you'll look at the literature,

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there are always going to be case reports of malignant transformation,

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but it's really, really rare such that people,

4:54

and we consider this a benign entity.

4:58

We know that it often arises in females.

5:00

About three-quarters of the cases are seen in females,

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and those females tend to be over the age of 60.

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That's a statistic that you may end up remembering.

5:08

You don't know if you can hang your hat on that,

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but it's certainly something that we see more often than not.

5:17

Generally, the teaching was that it arises in the head of the pancreas,

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but as it turns out, it can really arise anywhere.

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I think remembering that it arises in the head

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of the pancreas may actually hinder you at times,

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because then you may not call it what it is

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just because it doesn't arise in that location.

5:33

It can arise anywhere, but it likes the head of the pancreas.

5:36

It almost always is incidental.

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Occasionally, can have pain or some pancreatic biliary symptoms.

5:41

On imaging, it has a variety of appearances.

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Now, this appearance that we see here

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is probably the most common is microcystic,

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so-called honeycomb in appearance.

5:50

You have these innumerable tiny cysts that are together

5:54

and bunched up together.

5:56

The teaching is that you'll see more than six cyst, each

5:59

less than two centimeters, but I don't know, at least in my practice,

6:01

we don't measure any of these cysts.

6:03

I don't know if the group out here listening in the Zoom call does that.

6:06

We just sort of gestalt and have a look at it.

6:10

They're thin-enhancing septations, and occasionally,

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you'll see a central scar, which is calcified.

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I'm assuming, and I don't have a CT on this,

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but I'm assuming that this T2 hypointense focus in the center

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of it is as good a look for a central calcified scar as any is.

6:25

The borders tend to be multilobulated as well.

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They don't have smooth borders.

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They tend to be multilobulated because you got

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all these cysts that are clustered together that make it up.

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Unfortunately, you have different variants,

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which are, luckily, I guess less common that can confuse things.

6:41

Some of you in the call may know the microcytic

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or oligocystic variant seen in up to 25% of cases.

6:47

I have to say we really don't see this that often

6:49

in clinical practice where it doesn't look like this.

6:51

It looks like they're much more larger cysts that are making it up.

6:56

It often mimics some mucinous cystadenoma,

6:58

so you really can't differentiate that on imaging at all.

7:01

There's this "solid variant" where the cystic stuff is less apparent,

7:06

and you're really just seeing septations mainly.

7:09

When you give contrast, it looks like the whole thing

7:11

is enhancing and in those instances,

7:13

it may actually mimic a neuroendocrine tumor.

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Not a cystic neuroendocrine tumor, but a solid neuroendocrine tumor.

7:20

Again, having an endoscopic ultrasound with sampling is key.

7:24

What do you do for this?

7:26

You need something to establish the diagnosis.

7:28

If you look at the literature,

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there are different guidelines on what to do with these cases,

7:32

but most societies agree that if you see

7:34

something that looks like a serous cystadenoma,

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you're going to want to get sampling

7:38

to make sure that's exactly what it is.

7:39

Now, if you establish the diagnosis,

7:43

then there's no real need for follow-up unless the patient has symptoms.

7:48

The only caveat to that is that the ACR guidelines suggest

7:51

that when it's above 4 centimeters or about this size,

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you may want to get it resected, or at least get a surgical consult

7:56

because it's possible that if you had a sampling,

7:58

you may have undersampled this lesion.

8:01

Now, this happened to be a lady who was in her late 70s.

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We've been following this.

8:06

She happened to have some ductal dilatation,

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which was probably due to mass effect

8:11

from this lesion rather than concurrent IPMN or anything.

8:16

We've been following her for some time

8:18

and had been doing okay with no plans

8:21

of resection due to other comorbidities.

8:25

So this case was a serous cystadenoma.

8:28

Move on to our next case.

Report

Faculty

Mahan Mathur, MD

Associate Professor, Division of Body Imaging; Vice Chair of Education, Dept of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging

Yale School of Medicine

Tags

Pancreas

Other Systems

Oncologic Imaging

Neuroendocrine

Neoplastic

Multidisciplinary considerations

MRI

General Oncologic Imaging Concepts

Gastrointestinal (GI)

Body

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