Interactive Transcript
0:00
This is a 75-year-old with a PSA of 6, no urinary
0:04
symptoms, and a benign palpating gland on exam.
0:08
We have our axial T2,our axial ADC map, windowed at 1400x1400,
0:13
a B equals 1600 diffusion image,
0:16
and sort of a mid-phase post-contrast image.
0:20
Um, so when I scroll through this case,
0:23
on the ADC map and look in the peripheral
0:25
zone, I don't see any focal black holes.
0:28
There's no areas to me of focal diffusion
0:30
restriction sitting in the peripheral zone.
0:34
When I look in the transition zone, I see a moderately
0:36
enlarged transition zone with some nodular findings.
0:42
I see some thickened stroma anteriorly,
0:45
normal region of the central gland.
0:50
This patient had a PSA density of. And I believe when
0:55
we read this study initially many years ago, we found
0:58
something over on the left side to do a targeted biopsy
1:01
on that in retrospect doesn't meet the PI-RADS criteria.
1:04
Systematic biopsies in this patient showed a
1:06
significant neoplasm at the right base laterally,
1:10
which should be somewhere up in this region.
1:12
So certainly in the peripheral
1:13
zone, I don't see a correlate.
1:15
Um, the only thing that I'm seeing in
1:17
retrospect that might correspond to this.
1:20
Is this region right here.
1:21
And I would have thought this was
1:23
low signal in part of a BPH nodule.
1:26
Um, it has nicely defined margins.
1:28
They're irregular, but they're well-defined.
1:30
It's nice low signal.
1:31
There's no diffusion restriction.
1:33
It doesn't have a lenticular shape.
1:35
Even in retrospect, this to me looks
1:37
like low signal within a BPH nodule.
1:39
Um, so, even probably today I
1:42
would have read this as low signal.
1:44
No evidence of a focal neoplasm.
1:47
So, in our practice, patients
1:49
who have a PSA density above 0.15
1:51
proceed to biopsy, even if
1:55
they don't have a focal lesion.
1:56
And the reason for that is that, you know,
1:58
sometimes MR doesn't see the significant cancers.
2:02
And in patients with a Um, and, and you can use
2:07
different levels of PSA density as a risk threshold
2:10
to decide which patients with a normal MRI to biopsy
2:13
and which patients with a normal MRI not to biopsy.
2:16
And different groups use different risk thresholds
2:19
and we've been happy, uh, with a threshold of 0.15.
2:22
52 00:02:22,724 --> 00:02:24,890 And of course, there's always a discussion between, you,
2:24
the radiologist, and the patient as to whether or not they should
2:27
go to biopsy or if that threshold should be a little higher,
2:29
a little lower, and that can take into account things like
2:32
family history, personal preference, and, and so forth.
2:35
Uh, and it's important because no test is perfect, and
2:38
the MR is going to not show the findings sometimes.
2:41
Uh, so having another parameter that you can use to push
2:44
higher-risk patients towards biopsy, even in the absence
2:47
of a finding in MRI, is very good and we found that this
2:51
is not significantly increasing the number of men that we
2:53
biopsy but we do find cancer occasionally in these patients.
2:59
And then even if, you know, the MR didn't show
3:01
anything and the biopsy comes back positive it's
3:04
not a waste because you can go back and oftentimes
3:07
you'll see on the MR what What the biopsy corresponds
3:10
to, even if you didn't call it prospectively.
3:12
So even in this case, if this was the region
3:15
where the biopsy came positive from, I can still
3:18
estimate a size, which is helpful in treatment.
3:21
I can still say, Hey, there's no extracapsular spread.
3:23
Uh, so the scan can still be useful in retrospect.
3:26
And sometimes you'll find it's
3:27
not that the scan didn't show it.
3:29
It's that we just missed it and
3:31
didn't see it and misread the scan.
3:33
And in that case, it becomes a
3:34
very good learning experience.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.