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Case Review: PI-RADS 5 and Applying T-Stage Scoring

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Okay, let's take a 62-year-old man with a PSA

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level of 41.32 in December of 2017 and then a PSA

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that rose to 53.97 nanograms per mL on 2-26-18.

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The patient has had two negative prior

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biopsies, one in 2014 and one in 2015.

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So our purpose in illustrating

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this case is twofold.

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One, to illustrate the pitfalls of very far

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anterior cancers and how they can blend in,

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even on MRI, with the anterior fibromuscular

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stroma, and as a subset of that, be very

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difficult to access biopsying the gland from

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the back because they're so far anteriorly.

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The second thing I want to do is

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once again illustrate T staging.

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So let's talk about T staging for a moment.

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You know, a TAT one stage is a clinically

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in apparent cancer, a T two stage, just for

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basic, basic, it's confined to the gland,

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and then you can break that T two stage

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up into T two A, T two B, and T two C.

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Uh, an A involves one half of one lobe.

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A B involves more than one half of one lobe,

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and a C involves both sides of the gland.

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So both lobes, a T three.

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A T3 extends through the prostate capsule.

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You've got a T3A, which can be unilateral

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or bilateral capsular extension, and a

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T3B, which invades the seminal vesicles.

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And then you've got a T4, where the tumor

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is fixed or invades the seminal vesicles.

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Uh, adjacent structures other than the

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seminal vesicle, like the external sphincter,

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the rectum, the bladder, the levator

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muscles, the pelvic sidewall, and so on.

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Now you could also assess the status of regional

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nodes, as we've discussed in other vignettes.

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And you can look for distant metastases, so that

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would give you your N stage and your M stage.

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Go to those vignettes for

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assessment of those criteria.

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So let's take this case.

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We scroll axially, and there should be

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a thin lentiform fibromuscular stroma.

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How thin should it be?

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Maybe 6, maximum 8 millimeters.

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So it might look like this.

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But it shouldn't really look like this.

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There's just too much charcoal-like

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smearing, dark signal intensity anteriorly.

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Now you might say to yourself,

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well, okay, how much is too much?

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Well, I've given you a number.

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But don't get so fixed on the number.

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You know, maybe there are some people that

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have a 9 mm anterior fibromuscular stroma.

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Maybe they have a 3 mm.

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So, let's use what's available to us.

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So, let's go to the coronal, which is probably

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going to be the least useful projection,

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because we're tangent to, or parallel to the tumor,

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but it's awfully smooth and gray, charcoal-like.

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That's a bit disturbing.

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Let's go to the sagittal where it might be more

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helpful because we're going to be perpendicular to

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this potential crossing side-to-side tumor that is

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blending with the anterior fibromuscular stroma.

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And there it is.

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Oh, it's not just lentiform side-to-side.

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It's lent to form up and down.

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Here it is.

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It goes all the way from here, to here, to here.

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Oh, it's a lot bigger than it

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looked in the sagittal projection.

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The sagittal was very helpful.

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And we have more than two centimeters of anterior

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capsular contact with bulging anteriorly.

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So you should at least suggest the

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possibility of micro-invasion of the anterior capsule,

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which would make this a potential.

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T3 lesion.

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Now what else can we use to supplement

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our suspected diagnosis of a cancer and a

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PSA 5, meaning it's greater than 1.

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5 centimeters, in fact, cranial

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caudate was well over 2 centimeters,

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and I would use the diffusion image.

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So let's go to it.

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I wouldn't use the dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI.

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That's probably my least favorite.

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Favored nation sequence.

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Let's go to the diffusion image, the B1600

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image, and right there, in the area we

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were suspicious, let's blow it up and make

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it bigger, we have diffusion restriction.

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There it is.

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Let's scroll it.

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It's on multiple axial sections because

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it goes all the way up and down the

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base and apex of the anterior gland.

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Let me show you a B value that is zero.

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You really don't see anything, do you?

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Let me show you a B value that

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is 50, really don't see much.

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When you go to the higher B value, say 1200, and

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then to 1600, the cancer is diffusion-restricting

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and separated from the rest of the gland.

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Let's compare it with the ADC map in which

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the signal intensity should be low, and it is.

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And we can scroll that and see the volume of

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cancer and potentially trace it on the T2.

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And the diffusion-weighted image.

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Now let's go back to the morphologic

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image for a moment, and I'm just going

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to one up it, and let's make a survey.

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Now some of you may like to have a T1-weighted

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image, or a 3D T1 appearing image, such as a

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T1 GRE, with thin slices, to look for nodes,

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and separate them out from vessels, and look

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for bony metastases, and other morphologic

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abnormalities, and that's perfectly reasonable.

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You could also use a high-quality T2

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to do that, although it's not as easy.

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But if you're very experienced,

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you can use the T2.

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Let's do that, and what are we looking for?

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We're looking for solid, round objects

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that don't have a fatty hilum in them.

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And they're not tubular.

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So let's keep scrolling.

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And I see some flow voids in

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the femoral artery and vein.

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And I see a gray oval or

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round structure on both sides.

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And it's too big, and it's too bulbous, and it's

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too juicy, and it's got a convex outer border.

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It's not crinkled.

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Most nodes that are benign look like this.

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They kind of have this crinkly look to them.

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And in the center, they'll

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have a little bit of fat.

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No fat, not crinkly, very bulbous,

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and in this case, bilateral.

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This is regional lymphadenopathic

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involvement by prostate cancer.

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So if we were going to stage this, we would

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give this an N1, N0, no nodes, N1, regional nodes.

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And then if we had distant metastases,

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we'd go into our M staging.

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So this case is illustrative of two,

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perhaps three, key teaching points.

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One, that antero-apical lesions can

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blend in with the anterofibromuscular

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stroma and easily get missed on imaging.

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As a subset of that, two, Biopsying the gland

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from the back may not make it easy for the

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surgeon to access this very far anterior tumor.

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And three, when you're T staging these

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lesions, evaluate the capsule on both sides,

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and do not forget to evaluate the

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skeleton and the other associated accessory

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structures in the neighborhood,

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like the seminal vesicles, like the capsule,

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like the regional lymph nodes,

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which were positive in this patient.

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And for those of you that were dialing in

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and watching everything, there is a huge

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cyst in the testicular region, an epididymal cyst,

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which is gigantic on the film edge.

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This is an example of a PI-RADS 5 in the

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anterior fibromuscular stromal region, both at

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the apex, at the middle of the gland, and the

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base of the gland, running all the way anterior,

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up and down with suspected capsular microinvasion.

Report

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Prostate/seminal vesicles

Neoplastic

MRI

Genitourinary (GU)

Body

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