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Hypovascular Metastasis from Breast Cancer

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Our next patient is a 40-year-old female

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with a history of breast cancer who's

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getting a routine staging study, um,

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to evaluate for metastatic disease.

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We'll start off with, uh,

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the CT scan of this patient.

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So we'll go right over to the abdomen.

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As we scroll through some of the first

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abdominal images, we see that there

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is a lesion in the liver right up the

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hepatic dome, relatively hypodense.

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Um, and based on this image alone,

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it has a nonspecific appearance.

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And for that purpose, uh, an MRI was

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requested to try to characterize this.

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So we'll start evaluating our MR images by

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looking at the T2-weighted sequence with

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fat saturation, and we can see the lesion

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here right at the hepatic dome segment 8.

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And it has this sort of intermediate to

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slightly sort of hyperintense T2 signal.

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If we look at the T2 signal,

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it's certainly nowhere below

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near as bright as the cerebrospinal fluid

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here, so it doesn't have any T2 signal

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that can reassure us that it's something

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benign like a cyst or a hemangioma.

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If anything, that T2 signal is similar

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to the spleen, so that tells us that this

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may be something we need to worry about.

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Also seen partially on this image is the

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patient's breast cancer here in the left breast.

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Let's proceed to the in and out of phase images

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to see if this lesion contains any fat, and so

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here we have the T1 out-of-phase image, here

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we have the T1 in-phase image, and the lesion

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is essentially identical in its appearance

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on the out-of-phase and in-phase images.

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It is hypointense with respect to the

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liver parenchyma; there is no signal loss

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on the out-of-phase image within this

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lesion to suggest the presence of fat.

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And finally, if we look at our post

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contrast images, this is a T1 fat-sat

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post-contrast arterial phase, portal

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venous phase, equilibrium phase.

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We can see that this lesion has rim enhancement.

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Right, so the periphery of

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this is enhancing quite avidly.

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Unlike a lot of the lesions that we've

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seen so far that we've described as non

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rim-like arterial phase hyperenhancement

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where the central portion is enhancing.

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This has a rim enhancement.

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That rim enhancement is somewhat persistent

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on the portal venous and equilibrium phases,

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and the actual internal aspect of this lesion

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itself enhances a little bit, probably low-level

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enhancement, but doesn't enhance that much.

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These imaging features are characteristic

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of a hypovascular liver metastasis.

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This happens to be a

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metastasis from breast cancer.

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As you can see, it looks quite different than

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what we've seen with hepatocellular carcinomas.

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It also looks quite different than what

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we've seen, uh, for cholangiocarcinomas,

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which has progressive enhancement among

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the different, uh, phases, and looks quite

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different from hypervascular tumors, which

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enhance avidly in this, uh, arterial phase

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over here, and subsequently look darker on the

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portal venous and equilibrium phase images.

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

Neoplastic

MRI

Liver

Gastrointestinal (GI)

Body

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