Interactive Transcript
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This is a young female.
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This is an 18-year-old female who had
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a mass that was detected on ultrasound, actually.
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And she saw the pancreatic mass in ultrasound
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and wanted to get a CT scan to follow it up.
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So I'll share with you the T2-weighted images
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and maybe this time I'll zoom things up a little bit.
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And so here's the mass, and it is arising from the pancreas.
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I know it's somewhat tough to see this
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in the pancreas here, but it's sort of arising and
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sort of coming inferior to it
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but it is arising, probably from the body
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of the pancreas, complex-looking lesions
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and hyperintense components and even T2 hypointense components.
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This is what it looks like on the fat sat image.
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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.
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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.
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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,
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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.
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And so here we go.
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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.
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So, again, a bunch of options here, we've seen examples of a bunch of these cases.
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Main duct IPMN, SPEN, Adenocarcinoma, Serous cystadenoma.
2:01
Yeah, SPEN.
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Yeah. And I think it's perhaps a function of the choices I've given you as well.
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I find these, you know, there's no consistent appearance that
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I find to SPENs, and it's only one of the things I think about
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in the appropriate context, which is almost all are seen in females.
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A lot of them are seen in younger females, particularly below the age of 35.
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It can rise anywhere,
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but often in the body until they don't have a communication in the duct.
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They don't have malignant potential really, very, very low malignant potential.
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But the larger they get, particularly more than 5cm,
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they're more likely to be malignant or can have that malignant potential.
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And it's almost always incidental.
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And so what are you going to see on imaging.
2:43
Well, I think, you know,
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this look is as good to look for a SPEN in the appropriate context as I've seen.
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And that you'll see a pretty well encapsulated mass.
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So you can draw, you know,
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a nice little border to it, defining where the lesion sort of begins and ends.
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There may be some calcifications, peripherally or centrally.
3:02
They have often have cystic components,
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maybe a few small, smaller components.
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One thing that has been described with SPEN
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is this preponderance for them having hemorrhage.
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And so when I see, you know,
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a mass with hemorrhage in a young female body,
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the pancreas,
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some cystic components, some components that are enhancing.
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Here, I think the enhancing components are very faint, but I think there are some
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septations or other thicker components that are enhancing.
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You know, I like to bring up the possibility of a SPEN.
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Knowing that it's possible that I'm going
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to be wrong sometimes, but particularly when there's hemorrhage,
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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
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because of the mucin. But usually, that's not T2 hypointense,
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like in this instance, which is what hemorrhage could look like.
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Usually that mucin is a little bit more intermediate T2 signal.
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And so I think, you know, you're not always going to be right
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calling this prospectively, but I think if it's,
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you know,
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the appropriate context of a young female with a well-encapsulated tumor,
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partially cystic, maybe some hemorrhage,
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maybe a little bit of enhancement,
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then it's something you certainly should raise in your differential.
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And once again,
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you've got to do an endoscopic ultrasound to verify that that's what it is.
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And when it is that, treatment is resection
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because there is that low malignant potential.
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