Interactive Transcript
0:01
So this patient's a 60-year-old gentleman,
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history of sepsis, got an MRI of the
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abdomen to evaluate the etiology of this.
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I'm going to start off by looking
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at the axial and coronal T2 images.
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As we scroll down the axial images,
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we're starting to see ductal dilatation
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in the left hepatic lobe, ductal
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dilatation in the right hepatic lobe.
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As they get to their confluence,
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there is abrupt narrowing.
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And we also notice, we may not notice in
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our first scroll, but in our second, third,
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fourth scrolls, we may notice that there is
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in fact thickening right at that confluence.
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Look at the soft tissue that is
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narrowing that confluence, the
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right and left hepatic bile ducts.
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So dilated bile ducts, soft tissue
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thickening right at their confluence.
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And as we go downwards, the extrahepatic
0:55
biliary tree is relatively normal in its limits.
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This relationship is nicely seen
1:00
on the coronal weighted images.
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as well, where you have dilated
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left hepatic ducts, dilated right
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hepatic ducts, right where they join.
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There is some narrowing at that biliary
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confluence right over there, and the
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extrahepatic biliary tree is within normal limits.
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We can again see this very beautifully
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on the ERCP images, where the intrahepatic
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bile ducts are dilated, the extrahepatic
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biliary tree is within normal limits.
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And there's certainly a segment
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here where you don't see the bile
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ducts because they're narrowed.
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When we look at our post-contrast
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sequences, start off with the
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pre-contrast axial T1 fat sat images.
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You notice that there is some
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soft tissue thickening here.
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It just looks way too thick
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prior to even giving contrast.
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When we give contrast in the arterial phase,
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you can see again that there is some hyper
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enhancement of that biliary confluence where
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the right and left hepatic ducts meet, look
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way thicker, enhance way more than it should.
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I'm going to put the arterial phase on the side.
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And the next thing I'm going to do is go
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all the way to the most delayed phases
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I have in the post-contrast images.
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Okay.
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to show you what happens.
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So this is where that thickening is.
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This is sort of where we saw that
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soft tissue in the T2 images.
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We look at our delayed equilibrium phase
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images, you can see that area enhancing as well.
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But I want you to note what happens in that
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there is more enhancement on this delayed phase.
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This area here, that thickening, that
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enhancement looks brighter on this
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image than it does on this image.
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So in some sense, there's more progressive
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and brighter enhancement associated with a
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soft tissue mass at the biliary confluence.
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Putting everything together, this is very,
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very concerning for a malignancy, and
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specifically for a cholangiocarcinoma.
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Now, cholangiocarcinoma is a malignancy
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that arises from the bile ducts.
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These are most commonly adenocarcinomas.
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They tend to occur in the sixth to
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seventh decades of life and slightly,
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slightly more common in males.
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Now they can occur anywhere in the biliary
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tree, but we generally organize them,
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at least their imaging appearance, into
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three categories based on their location.
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And I'm going to show you examples
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of all those three categories.
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The first category is what we're seeing here,
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this hilar or perihilar cholangiocarcinoma.
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It's the most common location.
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When we see cholangiocarcinomas, and it's
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really centered at the confluence of both
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the right and left intrahepatic ducts, we've
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also known as a Klatskin tumor. So that's
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how you may have heard of it as well, and
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essentially results in intrahepatic ductal
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dilatation, which we can see over here, without
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dilatation of the extrahepatic biliary tree.
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Now, it's often a very ill-defined mass,
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but one of the key imaging features of
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cholangiocarcinoma, one that is manifested
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in this case, is that the enhancement will
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be more apparent on the more delayed images.
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And that's thought to be because this is
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the type of tumor that is very fibrous
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and also elicits a desmoplastic reaction.
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And any tumor that does that tends
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to enhance a little bit brighter
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on the more delayed phase images.
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One of the things that you need to know
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about specifically these hilar or perihilar
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cholangiocarcinomas is that there is
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something called a Bismuth-Corlette
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classification system of how we describe
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these when they are in this particular
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location, and it's important only because
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it has implications for surgical management.
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Now, this is certainly something you can look
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up if your surgeons require you to mention
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it, but suffice it to say is that what you
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really need to describe is a couple of things.
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If you see a tumor that's located in that hilar
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region, something you're worried about
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a cholangiocarcinoma, you need to mention
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whether it involves the biliary confluence
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or it doesn't involve the biliary confluence.
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If it doesn't involve the biliary confluence,
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you need to tell them what the distance
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to the biliary confluence is, and if it does
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involve the biliary confluence, you need
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to mention whether it involves the right
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hepatic duct, the left hepatic duct,
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or does it involve both hepatic ducts?
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If you see this instance, this, we
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have a cholangiocarcinoma that does
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involve the biliary confluence.
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It does go upwards to involve
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the right hepatic duct here.
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It also goes upwards to involve a small
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portion of the left hepatic duct over here.
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And so this is a nice example of a
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cholangiocarcinoma located in the most common
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location where it likes to occur, that is
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at the hilar, perihilar region of the liver.
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