Interactive Transcript
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Following is, uh, a patient with a
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history of cirrhosis who presents
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for a surveillance imaging study
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looking for hepatocellular carcinoma.
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So we'll start off by looking
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at our post-contrast sequences.
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We have, uh, dynamic post-contrast
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images, and I want to focus on a
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lesion in the right hepatic lobe.
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So the first image here is, uh,
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T1 FATSAT post-contrast arterial phase.
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Here we have the portal venous phase.
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Here we have the equilibrium phase.
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And this is the lesion in question.
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It's in, uh, segment 7.
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And we see that, after giving
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contrast, there's unequivocal
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non-rim arterial phase hyper-enhancement.
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If we were to measure the lesion, we'll see
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that it's less than 10 millimeters in size.
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If we go to the portal venous phase,
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we're going to be looking around this
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area in equilibrium, around this area.
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And, you know, if you look at it and scroll
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up and down a window, maybe, maybe you
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can see an area of, uh, washout or a rim
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capsule, but there's nothing that's definite.
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And one thing to note about the LI-RADS
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lexicon, when you use it, if you're
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unsure about an imaging finding,
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don't count it as if it's present.
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And so I think the best sort of interpretation,
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or the most, uh, safest and perhaps most
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consistent interpretation of this is that
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there's non-RIM hyperenhancements, less than
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10 millimeters, and there's really no definite,
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uh, washout and no definite pseudocapsule.
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There's no prior studies that we have
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to see if there's growth in the interim.
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And so just based on sort of these values,
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this would qualify as a LI-RADS 3 lesion.
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Now the reason I wanted to show this case is
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that in addition to these features that I've
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talked about, there is a list of additional
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features that can upgrade LI-RADS nodules
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or can in fact downgrade LI-RADS nodules.
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You're only allowed to upgrade
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or downgrade by one point.
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And you can never upgrade anything
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to a LI-RADS 5 based on what we call
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these ancillary imaging features.
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So let's look at the ancillary
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imaging feature that would potentially
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upgrade this nodule to a LI-RADS 4.
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In this case, the ancillary feature
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that upgrades this nodule is the
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presence of T2 hyperintensity.
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So this is an axial T2-weighted
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image with fat saturation.
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And as we said, this nodule is arterial
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phase hyperenhancement, non-RIM.
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It's less than 10 millimeters, there's
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no washout, there's no pseudocapsule,
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qualifies therefore as a LI-RADS 3, but
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if you look at the T2-weighted images, this
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feature, the hyperintensity, upgrades
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this to a LI-RADS 4 lesion, and this
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should go to a multidisciplinary tumor
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board setting for further discussion.
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And if you look at the LI-RADS PDF document
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through the ACR website, there's a whole
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list of features that favor malignancy
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and allow you to upgrade the nodule and,
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or benignity that downgrade the nodule.
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And some of the ones that I think we come across
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perhaps the most often is the presence of this
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T2 hyperintensity that allows you to upgrade it.
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And the presence of nodule within a nodule
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appearance that was shown in one of the
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earlier cases within this case series, as
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well as the presence of fat in a lesion.
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Cycle back to fat within liver lesions in
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patients with cirrhosis in a different case.
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But these are three things that upgrade nodules.
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As I said, there's a whole list of them which I
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encourage you to look at as you go through the
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ACR document on the LI-RADS lexicon terminology.
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