Interactive Transcript
0:01
So this patient is, uh, younger than
0:03
some of the other patients we've
0:04
seen so far in these, uh, vignettes.
0:06
This is a 23-year-old female who presents, um,
0:11
with abnormal liver function tests. Got some
0:13
other imaging that showed liver mass, and we've
0:15
been asked to do an MRI to further evaluate it.
0:18
So I'll scroll through first
0:20
sets of images for this patient.
0:22
These are going to be, uh, T2 and T1-weighted
0:25
images, and I'll just kind of scroll through
0:27
it up and down at first to give you a sense
0:29
of sort of what's going on in the liver.
0:32
And then I'll kind of focus in this area.
0:35
So here, uh, is the T2-weighted sequence.
0:37
This doesn't have any fat saturation with it.
0:39
This is a T1-weighted sequence with fat
0:42
saturation and without intravenous contrast.
0:46
And there's a really large lesion
0:48
that essentially is replacing
0:50
the entire right hepatic lobe.
0:52
So it's tough to even draw the
0:53
borders of this, but at least, I mean,
0:55
this whole thing here is abnormal.
0:57
And this whole thing here is abnormal.
0:59
Very heterogeneous in its appearance.
1:01
There's areas like over here
1:03
that are rather bright in signal.
1:05
There are areas, for example, over
1:07
here that have a sort of star-shaped
1:09
appearance that is, uh, darker in signal.
1:13
On the T1-weighted sequences,
1:14
again, heterogeneous.
1:15
Some areas that are a little bit
1:17
brighter, others that are darker.
1:19
Kind of very difficult to, uh, figure
1:21
out the boundaries of this lesion.
1:23
Again, if we scroll through this lesion,
1:25
we can see that certainly the right hepatic
1:27
lobe is replaced, but there are probably
1:28
lesions in the left hepatic lobe as well,
1:30
as can be seen over here and over here
1:32
that have similar imaging features to the
1:34
dominant mass in the right hepatic lobe.
1:36
Now, for this particular study, we didn't
1:38
get T1-weighted images, uh, in and out of
1:41
phase to look for the presence of lipid, but
1:43
there was no suggestion of lipid based on some
1:46
of the imaging findings that, uh, we do have.
1:48
So we move on ahead to our post-contrast images.
1:51
This is a T1 FAT SAT.
1:54
That post-contrast image in the
1:56
arterial phase, portal venous phase,
1:58
and this is the equilibrium phase.
2:00
And again, this is a large lesion, so
2:02
it's hard to show its entirety with just
2:04
a snapshot, but certainly, uh, all this
2:06
here is abnormal in the right hepatic lobe.
2:08
There's very heterogeneous
2:10
arterial hyperenhancement.
2:12
Certainly, by the time you get to the equilibrium
2:14
phase, you can argue that the areas that
2:16
are arterially enhancing are washing out.
2:18
Maybe there's areas of capsule or
2:20
pseudo-capsule associated with it.
2:22
And this central portion that was rather dark
2:24
on the T2-weighted images, we notice, is also
2:27
dark post-contrast and never really fills in.
2:30
It remains dark on the arterial phase, portal
2:33
venous phase, and equilibrium phase images.
2:37
So what we're really left with is a very large
2:39
lesion that has, you know, very heterogeneous
2:43
signal on the, uh, T2 and T1-weighted images.
2:47
It has this sort of T2 dark and non-enhancing
2:52
central portion of it.
2:56
Some people may even term that
2:57
a scar around the center of it.
3:00
There are areas that demonstrate arterial hyper
3:03
enhancement, there are areas that wash out,
3:05
and there may be areas that have a capsule
3:08
around portions of this lesion.
3:10
Now, this person had a history of cirrhosis, was
3:13
at risk for developing hepatocellular carcinoma.
3:16
Based on what we have, we could call
3:18
this a LI-RADS 5 lesion because of the
3:22
size, arterial hyperenhancement, and
3:23
washout, and move on to treatment.
3:26
However, LI-RADS does not apply
3:29
to this patient because this
3:30
patient has no risk factors.
3:32
for cirrhosis, does not have
3:35
hepatitis B infection, nor does this
3:37
patient have a history of prior HCC.
3:40
The LI-RADS only applies to those
3:43
patients in those categories.
3:45
This happens to be a very unfortunate young
3:47
patient who is otherwise healthy, who happens
3:50
to have a large mass that has some imaging
3:53
features of HCC, but we cannot use LI-RADS in
3:55
this setting for the reasons that are mentioned.
3:58
So this warrants a biopsy, this was
4:00
biopsied, and this turned out to be a
4:02
histological subtype of HCC that is known
4:07
as fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma.
4:12
Now, the important thing to know about
4:14
this particular subtype is that it tends
4:17
to happen in younger patients, typically
4:21
in the second to third decades of life.
4:24
And, uh, as mentioned, patients
4:26
tend to be otherwise healthy.
4:29
No known history of cirrhosis typically
4:32
associated with this finding.
4:35
So, LI-RADS does not apply in this setting.
4:38
When they do present, the
4:39
lesions can be rather large.
4:40
They can range from 5 to 20 centimeters.
4:43
On average, they can be around 13 centimeters.
4:46
These are large lesions.
4:48
And for hepatocellular carcinomas, we can
4:50
often use alpha-fetoprotein as tumor markers.
4:54
If it's elevated, it tells us that there
4:56
may be the presence of this disease.
4:58
However, with fibrolamellar hepatocellular
5:01
carcinomas, usually these levels are
5:03
normal, or they're only minimally elevated,
5:06
despite the large size of the mass.
5:10
Overall, prognosis tends to be a
5:12
little bit better for this subtype than
5:15
other HCCs, although, you know, this
5:17
tends to also be quite aggressive, uh,
5:20
locally, and it frequently metastasizes.
5:23
So, not a great prognosis overall
5:26
due to those reasons.
5:28
So, this was a patient, healthy patient,
5:29
large liver lesion, some imaging features
5:31
of HCC, in which LI-RADS does not apply.
5:34
And this was biopsied, and this turned out
5:36
to be a histological subtype that tends
5:38
to be seen in young, healthy patients,
5:41
which may have a slightly better
5:43
prognosis than other HCCs of this size.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.