Interactive Transcript
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Thank you very much for the kind introduction.
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It's an honor to be here and
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spend the next hour or less than an hour going through a bunch of cases.
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And we're going to go through some cases of pancreatic cyst today.
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I just wanted to show my face for a few minutes so that you could see that I'm
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real here and that I've been in a bright space.
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So I'm going to stop the video, my video, so that you don't get distracted by that.
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But I really look forward to presenting these with you.
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I hope you find them useful.
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And I'm happy to answer as many questions as I can.
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I may not have all the answers,
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but hopefully we can have a dialogue that allows us all to learn a little bit.
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So I'm going to stop my camera,
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share my screen and get going on a handful of cases that I picked out.
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I have about seven cases.
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These are all deidentified, so don't worry if you're seeing any information here.
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This is all scrambled up information
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and I'd like to present the first case to the group.
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So here we go.
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This is going to be this patient over here.
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And so this is, we have a 79-year-old male.
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Again, that age is somewhat accurate, but not the real age for the patient.
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And it's getting an MRI to evaluate a pancreatic lesion.
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So I'm going to go through some sequences
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and we'll have a question pop up when I've gone through some of the sequences
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and we'll see if we can figure out what this is.
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So this is a T2-weighted sequence without fat sat.
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And so a lot of organs to look at, obviously.
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We're going to focus on the pancreas.
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And as I get to it,
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just going to scroll through it one time and scroll through it back up again.
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This is a coronal T2-weighted image.
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Over here, a little bit of motion here and there,
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but you can see the thing that we're looking at over here.
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I don't know about your place,
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MRCP sequence don't always come out too great.
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We try, but they're tough for our patients to take a long time to obtain.
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And so this is the MRCP sequence.
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I'm going to go to the T1 pre-contrast.
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Can see the lesion again over here.
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And then the post-contrast sequence, arterial phase.
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And we have portal venous phase.
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You can see somebody measured it over there.
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I'm going to take out the annotation so you can look at it.
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And then finally, the equilibrium phase over here.
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You can see that lesion.
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I'll be complete and give you the T1 in and out of phase.
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It may not help in this instance, but just to be complete in terms
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of the sequences that we have here.
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Happy to give it.
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You can see this is the out of phase image,
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in phase image. This is the lesion over here.
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And we don't always do diffusion-weighted imaging for pancreatic protocols.
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We try to, but depending on the scanner.
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Doesn't always happen.
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So I'm just going to go straight to the higher b-value and focus
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on that with the ADC images side by side for you to see if you find it very useful.
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So, once again, T2-weighted images over here.
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I'll give you the T1 post-contrast over here.
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That's the lesion in question.
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Can we share the first polling question for the group?
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So in this case, we're asking the most likely diagnosis.
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We've seen it on a bunch of sequences.
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Options that I'm providing for you,
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side-branch IPMN (Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm).
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There's a pseudocyst.
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Certainly, always a possibility in the correct context.
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Could it be a cystic neuroendocrine tumor,
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or lymphoepithelial cyst.
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And so, no one thought is a pseudocyst, which is great.
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We have about three votes for side-branch IPMN,
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three votes for cystic neuroendocrine tumor,
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two votes for lymphoepithelial cyst.
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That's a mouthful. So a little bit all over the place.
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So let's go through this.
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So you know what? I think this is a..
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I think, you know...
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Certainly, some of the options that the group picked are very reasonable.
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As long as you can sort of justify why,
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I think that's always a reasonable thing to think about.
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So if we look at this lesion, I just wanted to focus on the two
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sequences that I think are most useful for me in this instance to figure out what
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I think the best diagnosis is in this instance.
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So, there's one thing that it could be
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a whole number of diagnoses, some of which are listed there.
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But what is the best diagnosis?
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Which is the one you think is the best one?
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So we certainly see a cystic mass.
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It's sort of at the center of the tail of the pancreas.
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You can argue body tail junction, but certainly tail of the pancreas.
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You can see the T2 hyperintense, T2 signal internally.
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What I think is important to note in this
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instance and what some of you may have noted is the rim around this lesion.
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So look at this rim.
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As I look at it, it's quite thickened, maybe only a couple of millimeters,
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but even a couple of millimeters for a lesion this big is pretty significant.
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And so, it's almost circumferential, quite thickened.
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When we give the post contrast sequences
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on the T1-weighted images, it was essentially hypointense.
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Look how this rim is really, really enhancing and that it's quite
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thickened, even somewhat nodular in places.
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So when you see that appearance,
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one thing you have to think about is cystic neuroendocrine tumor.
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I'll say that this is an entity,
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which I'm sure a lot of you on this Zoom call know about.
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It's only something that I got more familiar with a couple of years ago.
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And once I sort of recognized the imaging features,
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you know we've been doing pretty good in our group
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of calling these correctly prospectively.
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Let's take a step back and think about neuroendocrine tumors.
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When we think of neuroendocrine tumors,
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we're thinking of these well circumscribed tumors, sharp margins,
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they're not generally ill defined.
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You can draw a nice margin around it.
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You get contrast, they tend to enhance. And some of them,
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if they are large, can have calcifications.
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Generally, you think about function tumors.
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They're smaller, like less than 3 cm.
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The insulinomas,
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the gastronomas.
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The non-functioning ones
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tend to be a little bit larger, about more than 3cm.
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Typically more than 5cm, quite heterogeneous in their appearance.
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And they also have a greater chance of being malignant.
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And then you also have this subset
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of neuroendocrine tumors, these cystic neuroendocrine tumors
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that are good to know about, especially in the context of
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cystic pancreatic masses.
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And the imaging appearance is what I've shown you here,
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that thick peripheral rind.
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When you see the thick peripheral rind that enhances,
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you have to think of the neuroendocrine,
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cystic neuroendocrine tumor.
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Treatment is resection.
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Occasionally, if they're very small,
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some surgeons can enucleate them without doing a big resection.
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But they do have to be taken out.
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In terms of the other options that I provided, side-branch IPMN.
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You know, that's a great thought.
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I mean, most of these things end up being these pesky side-branch IPMNs.
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And for that, the clues to diagnose it prospectively is
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document and communication to the doctor.
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But I haven't seen a lot of side-branch IPMNs with a very thick rind around it.
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So that would be unusual for a side-branch IPMN.
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Pseudocyst, you know, it can look like anything,
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but in this context of pancreatitis would be unusual.
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And lymphoepithelial cyst, I threw that in there.
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It's a very tough to call, prospectively.
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They're very, very rare.
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And the ones that I've seen in the literature just look like cystic lesions.
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And you're never going to really be able to call it prospectively.
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But even the ones that I've seen, don't generally have that
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thick enhancing rim.
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So that's the teaching point here.
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So if you see a cystic mass like this with a thick rind of it enhancement,
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got to think of cystic neuroendocrine tumor.
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That's great.
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So that was the first case that I wanted to share with the group.
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