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Pancreatic Cyst Case 1

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0:00

Thank you very much for the kind introduction.

0:02

It's an honor to be here and

0:06

spend the next hour or less than an hour going through a bunch of cases.

0:09

And we're going to go through some cases of pancreatic cyst today.

0:13

I just wanted to show my face for a few minutes so that you could see that I'm

0:18

real here and that I've been in a bright space.

0:21

So I'm going to stop the video, my video, so that you don't get distracted by that.

0:26

But I really look forward to presenting these with you.

0:30

I hope you find them useful.

0:31

And I'm happy to answer as many questions as I can.

0:35

I may not have all the answers,

0:36

but hopefully we can have a dialogue that allows us all to learn a little bit.

0:40

So I'm going to stop my camera,

0:45

share my screen and get going on a handful of cases that I picked out.

0:50

I have about seven cases.

0:52

These are all deidentified, so don't worry if you're seeing any information here.

0:55

This is all scrambled up information

0:59

and I'd like to present the first case to the group.

1:03

So here we go.

1:04

This is going to be this patient over here.

1:08

And so this is, we have a 79-year-old male.

1:13

Again, that age is somewhat accurate, but not the real age for the patient.

1:19

And it's getting an MRI to evaluate a pancreatic lesion.

1:22

So I'm going to go through some sequences

1:24

and we'll have a question pop up when I've gone through some of the sequences

1:29

and we'll see if we can figure out what this is.

1:32

So this is a T2-weighted sequence without fat sat.

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And so a lot of organs to look at, obviously.

1:38

We're going to focus on the pancreas.

1:39

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.

1:47

This is a coronal T2-weighted image.

1:50

Over here, a little bit of motion here and there,

1:52

but you can see the thing that we're looking at over here.

1:57

I don't know about your place,

2:00

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.

2:08

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.

2:27

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.

2:37

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

2:43

of the sequences that we have here.

2:45

Happy to give it.

2:46

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

3:01

on that with the ADC images side by side for you to see if you find it very useful.

3:13

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.

3:22

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.

3:31

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).

3:38

There's a pseudocyst.

3:39

Certainly, always a possibility in the correct context.

3:43

Could it be a cystic neuroendocrine tumor,

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or lymphoepithelial cyst.

3:49

And so, no one thought is a pseudocyst, which is great.

3:53

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.

4:01

That's a mouthful. So a little bit all over the place.

4:03

So let's go through this.

4:05

So you know what? I think this is a..

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I think, you know...

4:09

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.

4:47

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.

5:21

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.

6:47

You know, that's a great thought.

6:49

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.

7:37

That's great.

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So that was the first case that I wanted to share with the group.

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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