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Pancreatic Cyst Case 6

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0:00

This is a young female.

0:04

This is an 18-year-old female who had

0:06

a mass that was detected on ultrasound, actually.

0:10

And she saw the pancreatic mass in ultrasound

0:12

and wanted to get a CT scan to follow it up.

0:15

So I'll share with you the T2-weighted images

0:17

and maybe this time I'll zoom things up a little bit.

0:23

And so here's the mass, and it is arising from the pancreas.

0:28

I know it's somewhat tough to see this

0:30

in the pancreas here, but it's sort of arising and

0:33

sort of coming inferior to it

0:34

but it is arising, probably from the body

0:36

of the pancreas, complex-looking lesions

0:38

and hyperintense components and even T2 hypointense components.

0:43

This is what it looks like on the fat sat image.

0:45

You get a better look at it. I think it actually looks nicer here.

0:48

So the largest lesion, maybe about 3cm in changed.

0:51

This is the pre-contrast image, which I wanted to share with the group as well.

1:00

So that component that was over here looks like this on the T1-weighted images.

1:05

And because it's bright, then it goes straight to the subtraction images,

1:12

which on this particular scanner, look a little bit like this,

1:16

which are probably not ideal, but I apologize for that.

1:19

But I will window it so that you can have a look at this lesion.

1:25

And so here we go.

1:28

This is the lesion here.

1:33

A 3cm in size and complexity to it, 18-year-old female discovered

1:37

in the context, maybe some of, you know, nonspecific pain.

1:44

And so let's have the poll, see what we think is the best diagnosis.

1:49

I think that's the question.

1:50

So, again, a bunch of options here, we've seen examples of a bunch of these cases.

1:55

Main duct IPMN, SPEN, Adenocarcinoma, Serous cystadenoma.

2:01

Yeah, SPEN.

2:03

Yeah. And I think it's perhaps a function of the choices I've given you as well.

2:07

I find these, you know, there's no consistent appearance that

2:11

I find to SPENs, and it's only one of the things I think about

2:14

in the appropriate context, which is almost all are seen in females.

2:19

A lot of them are seen in younger females, particularly below the age of 35.

2:23

It can rise anywhere,

2:24

but often in the body until they don't have a communication in the duct.

2:27

They don't have malignant potential really, very, very low malignant potential.

2:31

But the larger they get, particularly more than 5cm,

2:34

they're more likely to be malignant or can have that malignant potential.

2:38

And it's almost always incidental.

2:41

And so what are you going to see on imaging.

2:43

Well, I think, you know,

2:43

this look is as good to look for a SPEN in the appropriate context as I've seen.

2:48

And that you'll see a pretty well encapsulated mass.

2:51

So you can draw, you know,

2:52

a nice little border to it, defining where the lesion sort of begins and ends.

2:58

There may be some calcifications, peripherally or centrally.

3:02

They have often have cystic components,

3:05

maybe a few small, smaller components.

3:08

One thing that has been described with SPEN

3:10

is this preponderance for them having hemorrhage.

3:12

And so when I see, you know,

3:14

a mass with hemorrhage in a young female body,

3:18

the pancreas,

3:19

some cystic components, some components that are enhancing.

3:22

Here, I think the enhancing components are very faint, but I think there are some

3:25

septations or other thicker components that are enhancing.

3:28

You know, I like to bring up the possibility of a SPEN.

3:31

Knowing that it's possible that I'm going

3:33

to be wrong sometimes, but particularly when there's hemorrhage,

3:36

that's not a feature that you see often with a lot of the other tumors.

3:41

Mucinous cystadenomas, you can't see T1 intense stuff

3:44

because of the mucin. But usually, that's not T2 hypointense,

3:48

like in this instance, which is what hemorrhage could look like.

3:51

Usually that mucin is a little bit more intermediate T2 signal.

3:55

And so I think, you know, you're not always going to be right

3:58

calling this prospectively, but I think if it's,

4:01

you know,

4:01

the appropriate context of a young female with a well-encapsulated tumor,

4:05

partially cystic, maybe some hemorrhage,

4:07

maybe a little bit of enhancement,

4:09

then it's something you certainly should raise in your differential.

4:11

And once again,

4:13

you've got to do an endoscopic ultrasound to verify that that's what it is.

4:16

And when it is that, treatment is resection

4:18

because there is that low malignant potential.

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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