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Hepatic Adenoma

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This next patient is a 42-year-old female with an

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indeterminate liver mass seen on another imaging modality.

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And, uh, the thought was that this could reflect

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a hepatic adenoma or focal nodular hyperplasia.

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So we did an MRI, and we used, um,

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Eovist as our intravenous contrast agent.

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And so, let's go ahead and evaluate

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what this lesion looks like.

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So we'll start off with our T2-weighted sequences.

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As we scroll through it, you can see that there's

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a, uh, sizable lesion in the right hepatic lobe.

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On the T2-weighted images performed without

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fat saturation, you can see it over here.

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This is the T2-weighted TurboSpin echo

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sequences performed with fat saturation.

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The lesion is seen over here.

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And, if you look at it, um, quite hyperintense signal

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on the T2-weighted images seen on both sets of sequences.

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Now, you notice that the signal is hyperintense,

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but it's nowhere near as hyperintense as CSF.

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So, this is not going to be something that I can

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call immediately benign, like a sister hemangioma.

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If anything, the signal looks almost similar to the spleen.

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So, this is something that I really do need

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to evaluate on the remaining sequences to

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have a sense of what this is going to be.

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One of the other teaching points that this case showcases is

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The fact that the TurboSpin echo, uh, T2-weighted TurboSpin echo

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fat-saturated sequences really do have better soft tissue

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resolution compared to the, um, regular T2-weighted images.

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And we can see that if we scroll through these images, there

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are multiple liver lesions with imaging features that are

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similar to the index lesion that we're going to talk about.

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And these, for example, in the left hepatic loop

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are much better seen on the fat-saturated image here

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compared to, uh, the regular T2-weighted sequence.

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The other thing I'll note is that there is a lesion

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at the tip of the liver over here. Again, much better

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seen on the TurboSpin echo T2-weighted fat-saturated

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sequence compared to the regular T2-weighted sequence.

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And I want you to note the T2 signal within

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this; it's much brighter than the index

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lesion or any of the other liver lesions here.

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And so, this already, I can tell, is probably going to be

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something benign and that I don't need to worry about.

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Let's go back and evaluate our index lesion using

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the T1 in and out of phase imaging sequences.

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So here we have T1 in and out of phase.

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We're going to look at our index lesion in

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the right hepatic lobe, right over here.

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T1 T5. Let's look at it first on the in-phase sequence.

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Quite challenging to actually

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see the borders of this lesion.

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It's probably going to be this lesion over here.

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Pretty iso intense with respect to the liver parenchyma.

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Maybe some portions of it are minimally T1 hyper intense,

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but overall pretty iso intense with respect to the liver.

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What happens to this image on the out of phase image?

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Let's have a look.

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There are definite portions within

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it that drop out and signal.

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Look at the periphery of this lesion.

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Looks much darker.

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Look at this central portion of this lesion.

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It looks much darker.

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This lesion here looks much darker over here.

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So there's very discrete components within this lesion

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that lose signal on the out of phase image, and this

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tells us that this mass contains microscopic lipid.

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Based on this alone, my differential

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diagnosis narrows quite a bit.

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The common lesion in the liver that can contain

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microscopic lipid include hepatic adenomas

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and potentially hepatocellular carcinoma.

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However, hepatocellular carcinomas, or HCC, are seen

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in patients who have underlying cirrhosis typically.

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This patient is an otherwise healthy 40-year-old female.

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So already as I evaluate this on the remaining sequences,

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I'm going to be thinking that the imaging features

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are more likely going to reflect hepatic adenoma.

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Let's see what it looks like on the remaining phases.

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Prior to giving contrast, we have the

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T1 fat-saturated pre-contrast sequence.

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You can see the lesion over here.

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Portions of it are probably iso intense with respect to the

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liver parenchyma, maybe minimally hyperintense as well.

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And there are portions within it that are discretely

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hypointense, particularly this portion here.

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And that tells us that this contains

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microscopic lipid, as we previously discussed.

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The next set of sequences are the

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dynamic post-contrast sequences.

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As we scroll down and evaluate this lesion.

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We can see that it demonstrates

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enhancement on the arterial phase image.

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Homogeneous enhancement, particularly along the central

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portion of this lesion; the periphery, not so much.

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On the portal venous phase image, the

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mass remains hyperintense with respect

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to the liver parenchyma, suggesting that it

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still has some degree of enhancement.

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And certainly on the equilibrium phase, it looks similar,

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it looks hyperintense with respect to the liver parenchyma.

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So here we have a mildly T2 hyperintense mass.

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That has microscopic lipid that enhances with the

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imaging appearance pretty consistent from the arterial

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to the portal venous of the equilibrium phase images.

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If this is all we had, this would be very,

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very suggestive of a hepatic adenoma.

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Final thing we're going to look at is our post-contrast

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phase at 20 minutes to see if this retains contrast

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as would be expected for focal nodular hyperplasia.

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Or if this does not contain contrast, it appears

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as a black hole, as would be expected for adenoma.

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And here it is, 20 minutes post-contrast image,

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and we can see that the lesion is hypointense with

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respect to the liver parenchyma, and this combination

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of findings is compatible with a hepatic adenoma.

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Now hepatic adenomas are benign neoplasms.

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They're less common than FNH.

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for certain complications, most notably bleeding.

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And potentially malignant transformation to 8 CC

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or hepatocellular carcinoma, though I would

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say that cases of malignant transformation

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are very, very rare, very few and far between.

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Bleeding is the primary thing that we worry about.

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Like athenasias, this tends to

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happen in a similar age group.

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Having young females taking oral contraceptive pills or

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OCPs is a big risk factor for patients developing adenomas.

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It can also occur in, uh, male patients who are

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taking steroids, and it can occur in either females

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or males if they have glycogen storage disease,

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particularly type 1 type of glycogen storage disease.

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There are a variety hepatic adenoma,

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some of which have relevance for imaging.

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Three most common ones that we

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encounter are the inflammatory subtype,

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this is the most common subtype of hepatic adenoma, and

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this tends to have heterogeneous hyperintensity 2 signal.

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We also have the HNF alpha mutated hepatic adenoma.

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This is the one that's almost exclusively seen

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in females and is a very, very strong association

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with patients taking oral contraceptive pills.

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This often also has lipid

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deposition within the lesion itself.

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And finally, there is the beta catenin

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mutated hepatocellular adenomas,

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and these are the ones that are more likely to

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occur in male patients and have a theoretical

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malignant transformation to hepatocellular carcinoma.

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

Vascular

Non-infectious Inflammatory

MRI

Liver

Idiopathic

Gastrointestinal (GI)

Congenital

Body

Acquired/Developmental

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