Interactive Transcript
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Here we have a patient who is 78, and she's female.
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78-year-old female.
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Let me start showing you some of the images.
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Start off with a T2 weighted image without fat sat.
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Again, we're just going to focus on the pancreas over here.
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This is a lesion over here,
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rather a large lesion.
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It can look a little bit complex.
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This is a T2 fat-sat image, let's just have another look at it.
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Scrolling all the way up and down through it.
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T1 pre is what it looks like over here.
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We have some post-contrast sequences I'd like to share with you.
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Our arterial phase,
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just going to pause here for a few seconds so you can have a look at it.
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Portal venous phase,
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delayed or equilibrium phase.
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I'm going to scroll up and down through it
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so you get a nice sense of the complexity of this lesion over here.
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Finally, for completion's sake,
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as we look at these MRs in- and out-of-phase, see the lesion here.
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In the in-phase, it looks like this,
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not much real objective change
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between the two on the in- and out-of-phase.
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That's the lesion.
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There's DWI images as well over here if you want to look at it.
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This is a higher b-value.
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Once again, I'm going to finish off by showing you what I think are maybe
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some of the more key images to evaluate this lesson, the T2
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and the post-contrast over here.
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This is a second unknown case.
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We have the polling question to see what the group thinks.
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The most likely diagnosis, I'm giving you some options here ranging
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from a mucinous cystadenoma to a serous cystadenoma,
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adenocarcinoma as well,
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and then the SPEN tumor as well.
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Whenever the moderator wants to close the pole,
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we'll see what we think it is.
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We're leading towards serous cystadenoma.
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A few possibly thought it was a mucinous cystadenoma.
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Nobody thought it's an adenocarcinoma, which is great,
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and nobody thought it was just a SPEN, which is great.
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We're really between those two.
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Almost two-thirds thought it was serous, and one-third, mucinous.
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That's great. Let's have a look at this lesion as well.
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Here's the lesion on the T2 weighted images.
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It's at the head of the pancreas, and geez, it's quite complex.
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If you look at it, it looks like there's a small cyst here,
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a small cyst here, a small cyst here, a small cyst here,
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and there's just all clustered together to make up this large lesion.
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Inside of it, it looks like centrally,
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maybe there's a T2 hypointense focus.
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I'm not sure if that'll be important, or not,
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but that is certainly a part of the imaging appearance of this lesion.
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T1 pres are not as useful.
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They just show that there's no hyperintense
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content necessarily within this.
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The post-contrast sequence, it just showed to be quite a complex lesion.
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I'll just go to the delayed phase images, I think,
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which shows that the borders are somewhat lobulated.
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If you were to take your finger and run
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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.
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Internally, it has these reticulations.
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The reticulations may reflect the walls
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of these small cysts that are making this lesion up.
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It's located at the head of the pancreas.
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This happens to be, as I said, a lady in her late 70s,
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and so putting things together,
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the best diagnosis would probably be a serous cystadenoma,
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which is what this turned out to be.
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I think it's really tough.
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If you look at these pancreatic cystic lesions, in particular,
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it's very tough to come up with a prospective diagnosis.
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Even if you tell your providers, I think this is serous cystadenoma.
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Well, guess what? They're probably,
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particularly, at this size, they're probably going to have to do
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an endoscopic ultrasound to get some sampling
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to make sure that that's exactly what it is,
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and it doesn't mimicking something else.
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What do we need to know about serous cystadenoma as well?
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Good news is that they're benign tumors.
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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,
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and we consider this a benign entity.
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We know that it often arises in females.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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It can arise anywhere, but it likes the head of the pancreas.
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It almost always is incidental.
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Occasionally, can have pain or some pancreatic biliary symptoms.
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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.
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You have these innumerable tiny cysts that are together
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and bunched up together.
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The teaching is that you'll see more than six cyst, each
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less than two centimeters, but I don't know, at least in my practice,
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we don't measure any of these cysts.
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I don't know if the group out here listening in the Zoom call does that.
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We just sort of gestalt and have a look at it.
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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.
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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.
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Some of you in the call may know the microcytic
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or oligocystic variant seen in up to 25% of cases.
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I have to say we really don't see this that often
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in clinical practice where it doesn't look like this.
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It looks like they're much more larger cysts that are making it up.
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It often mimics some mucinous cystadenoma,
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so you really can't differentiate that on imaging at all.
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There's this "solid variant" where the cystic stuff is less apparent,
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and you're really just seeing septations mainly.
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When you give contrast, it looks like the whole thing
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is enhancing and in those instances,
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it may actually mimic a neuroendocrine tumor.
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Not a cystic neuroendocrine tumor, but a solid neuroendocrine tumor.
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Again, having an endoscopic ultrasound with sampling is key.
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What do you do for this?
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You need something to establish the diagnosis.
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If you look at the literature,
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there are different guidelines on what to do with these cases,
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but most societies agree that if you see
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something that looks like a serous cystadenoma,
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you're going to want to get sampling
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to make sure that's exactly what it is.
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Now, if you establish the diagnosis,
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then there's no real need for follow-up unless the patient has symptoms.
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The only caveat to that is that the ACR guidelines suggest
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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
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because it's possible that if you had a sampling,
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you may have undersampled this lesion.
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Now, this happened to be a lady who was in her late 70s.
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We've been following this.
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She happened to have some ductal dilatation,
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which was probably due to mass effect
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from this lesion rather than concurrent IPMN or anything.
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We've been following her for some time
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and had been doing okay with no plans
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of resection due to other comorbidities.
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So this case was a serous cystadenoma.
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Move on to our next case.
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