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LI-RADS 3 (THID)

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The following is a patient who presents, uh,

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for surveillance looking for hepatocellular

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carcinoma as a history of cirrhosis.

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So we'll jump right ahead to the T1

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post-contrast fat-saturated images.

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I'm gonna scroll down.

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There's a few lesions here, but the one I want

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you to pay attention to is this one down here.

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So this is, of course, the T1, uh,

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post-contrast fat-saturated image.

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This is done in the arterial phase.

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Now we can see this lesion over here at the

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periphery of segment 5, and we notice that it

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has non-rim arterial phase hyperenhancement.

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So unlike some of the other lesions that we've

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discussed up to this point, which didn't have

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arterial phase hyperenhancement, this indeed

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does have arterial phase hyperenhancement.

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That sort of categorizes it into, uh, a

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group of potential lesions that it could be.

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We can measure the size, and if

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we were to measure this, we'll see

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that it's less than 10 millimeters.

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The next step is to see whether it has any of

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the additional features that will allow us to

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qualify this as a hepatocellular carcinoma,

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a BI-RADS 5 category or even a 4 category.

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And to do that, we need to look at

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our remaining post-contrast images.

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This is T1 FATSAT post-contrast in the portal

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venous phase. This is the same thing in the

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equilibrium phase. This is that arterial

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phase image. Again, we have that image

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lesion here. That's arterial phase hyper-

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enhancing. It's less than 10 millimeters.

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If we look at the approximate location of the

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portal venous phase, very difficult to find.

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It's probably iso-intense.

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You don't see it on either of these phases.

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So there's no washout, there's no

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pseudocapsule, no washout associated with this.

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We don't have a prior to see

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if there's any interval growth.

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And so based on that, this would

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qualify as a BI-RADS 3 lesion.

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This is a patient who would then get a

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subsequent MR or CT exam in about 3 to 6

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months to see what happened to this lesion.

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And, uh, you know, somebody may look at

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this lesion and say, well, why doesn't this

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represent a FID that we talked about before,

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that transient hepatic intensity difference?

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After all, it's at the periphery, it's arterial

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enhancing. It becomes iso-intense on the, um,

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portal venous and equilibrium phase images.

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And if, if desired, you

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know, one may call this a FID.

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However, FIDs typically

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are much more wedge-shaped.

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If you look at this very subtly, there are

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rounded borders associated with this.

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So when you start to see those rounded

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borders, it's best to sort of qualify this

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and evaluate this lesion as something other

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than a FID so you can get close interval

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follow-up to see if it grows or changes its

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appearance on the subsequent imaging studies.

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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