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Hypovascular Metastasis Post-op

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So this is a 60-year-old gentleman who

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has liver lesions, and they've done an

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MRI for us to evaluate them and give

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an answer to what they look like.

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I'll start off with the post-contrast

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images in the arterial phase.

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And we can see many liver lesions

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spread throughout this liver.

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One here, starting at the liver dome.

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Another one over here.

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Another one over here.

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I'll just scroll through them just to

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kind of give you an appreciation of all

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these sort of liver lesions here, here,

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and here that we can see in this patient.

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And I'll just focus on one of them to

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sort of describe it a little bit more.

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If we just focus on this lesion here on

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the right hepatic lobe, this is a T1 FATSAT

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post-contrast image in the arterial phase.

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This demonstrates, you know, non-RIM

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arterial phase hyperenhancement.

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And we've seen that term used before to

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describe, you know, lesions in the literature,

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lexicon, and the only reason I use that here

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is just to show that, yes, you know, this

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may be enhancing, but, you know, this

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is not a case where we would use the literature,

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lexicon. This patient has no history of

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cirrhosis, no history of chronic liver disease,

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but does have a lesion that demonstrates

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sort of arterial phase hyperenhancement.

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Let's see what happens to this

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on the, uh, portal venous phase.

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On the portal venous phase, so this is

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T1 FATSAT post-contrast portal venous

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phase. The same lesion demonstrates washout.

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So you know, there is a temptation to describe

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this lesion as a hepatocellular carcinoma

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because we see arterial hyperenhancement

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and washout, except as seen in some of the

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previous examples, this patient does not have

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cirrhosis and we see multiple lesions, and

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so this in fact is an example, once again,

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of what a hypervascular liver metastasis

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looks like, right? Can look identical to HCC

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except the difference is patients don't have

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cirrhosis or a history of chronic liver disease.

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And what we had talked about in some

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of the earlier segments was how we

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can use local-regional therapy to

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treat hepatocellular carcinomas.

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We can use percutaneous techniques.

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We can use transarterial techniques, and

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to a certain degree, the same can be applied for

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liver metastases in a patient like this who has

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diffuse liver metastases that are hypervascular.

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We can certainly use transarterial

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techniques to try to treat them.

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And so that's what was decided for this

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patient, and this patient underwent

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radioembolization with Y90, and I'll show

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you what the results of that look like.

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So here we have the pre-Y90 treatment

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studies, and this is the post-Y90

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treatment exam, and again, we're just

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looking for avascular ablation cavities.

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Here we had one of the hypervascular

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metastases, the index lesion that I've

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shown you, now looks completely avascular.

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If we look at other lesions within the

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liver, for example, this lesion over

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here, this looks completely avascular.

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If we look more inferiorly, a lesion

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over here now looks completely avascular.

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A lesion over here now

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looks completely avascular.

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So we can use these local-regional therapies

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for diseases other than hepatocellular

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carcinomas, and we can get a fairly good

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effect if done in the appropriate patients.

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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