Interactive Transcript
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So here we have a patient with cirrhosis,
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getting a screening examination looking
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for a hepatocellular carcinoma.
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We have no priors to compare this to, so let's
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go ahead and have a look at the images.
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So as we've been doing for the other
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cases in this course, we're gonna look
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at the dynamic post-contrast images.
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I'm gonna focus on a lesion over here.
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And so we can see this is a T1
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fat-saturated post-contrast arterial phase
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image, portal venous phase image.
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This is the equilibrium phase image.
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And this lesion's in the caudate lobe,
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demonstrates non-rim arterial phase hyperenhancement
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at the inside of its enhancing.
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If we were to measure it, longest length
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is more than 20 millimeters in size.
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And if we look at the portal venous
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and equilibrium phase images, in a
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lesion that's approximately in this
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area, it's very difficult to assess
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whether there's definite washout or not.
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You may qualify a portion of this as washout,
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not 100% certain.
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Certainly, if you scroll through these images,
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through and through, it's not certain that
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that portion corresponds to the lesion itself.
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And again, with LI-RADS, if you're not
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sure, it's better to not over-call it.
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Sort of, it's better to under-call it.
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And that's what they want you to do for LI-RADS.
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And so, I'm going to say that there is, um,
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you know, sort of questionable washout.
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I certainly don't see any pseudocapsule.
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There's nothing that looks like it's
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a capsule surrounding a lesion like
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this, um, on any of those images.
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And so, we'll say that there's no
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pseudocapsule associated with this.
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And we don't have any priors, and
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so we, uh, really can't assess
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for, uh, growth either.
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So what we're left with is a, um, sizable
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lesion at 20 millimeters, which has
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non-rim arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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Those are the two imaging
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features that we're certain about.
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And so in the last few cases, we've seen
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large lesions that qualify as a LI-RADS 5.
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And this one actually qualifies as a LI-RADS 4.
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It would have qualified as a LI-RADS
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5 if it had any of these additional
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features: washout, pseudocapsule, or growth.
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But because we're not certain about some
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of them and some we don't see, we
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stick to a LI-RADS 4 category for this.
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Now you can certainly look at all the other
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imaging sequences that you have to see if
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there are any ancillary features that could
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bump this up, such as T2 signal, high
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T2 signal, fat, etc., things like that.
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But remember, the ancillary
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features cannot upgrade this
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to a LI-RADS 5 lesion.
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So they can upgrade LI-RADS lesions,
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but it cannot upgrade it to 5.
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Even in instances where this was
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present in this lesion, we would not
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be able to bump this up any further.
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So this stays as a LI-RADS 4 lesion.
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This is the sort of lesion that is then
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brought up in tumor board, and a decision
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is made after talking to surgeons,
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hepatologists, gastroenterologists, etc.,
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about how best to proceed
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with the next step for this.
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Do we treat it based on the
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assumption that it could be an HCC?
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Do we biopsy it?
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Do we do close follow-up, etc.?
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So this is a LI-RADS 4 lesion that's more than
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20 millimeters in size and demonstrates no
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additional features to bump it up to a LI-RADS 5.
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