Interactive Transcript
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The next few video vignettes will cover the
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imaging appearance of hepatocellular carcinoma
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within the liver, and we're going to use the
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LI-RADS lexicon to describe some of
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the liver lesions that we're going to see.
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So before we jump right into LI-RADS,
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I wanted to talk just very briefly about
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hepatocellular carcinoma in general.
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So hepatocellular carcinoma is the
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most common primary hepatic malignancy.
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It almost always occurs in patients who have
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chronic liver disease, and by some estimates,
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up to 70 to 90 percent will have cirrhosis,
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and those patients will develop hepatocellular carcinoma.
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We think that it develops in a stepwise
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manner in that, in the setting of chronic liver
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disease, you get these regenerating nodules,
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they're also known as cirrhotic nodules.
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And then one of these undergoes
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some degree of differentiation to
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become a low-grade dysplastic nodule.
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This then can undergo further differentiation
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to become a high-grade dysplastic nodule.
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And over time, this can then develop
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into hepatocellular carcinoma.
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Now, the smaller the lesion is at diagnosis,
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the better chance we have of survival
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treating it.
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And therein lies the impetus for a very
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robust image-based screening and surveillance
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programs in patients who are at risk
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for developing hepatocellular carcinoma.
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So we do screening in these patients
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with MRI, with CT, with ultrasound.
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A lot of that is dependent
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upon the institution itself.
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But the key imaging feature that
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we're looking for on MR imaging is
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arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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This is essential.
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We will not call a lesion
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hepatocellular carcinoma unless it
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has arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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But having arterial phase
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hyperenhancement is not sufficient.
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In addition to this, it needs to have, depending
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on the size of the lesion, some other imaging
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features, and those include what we call
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washout, pseudocapsule, or interval growth.
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Now, when we talk about interval growth,
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we're talking about greater than or equal
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to 50 percent in a study that is within
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or equal to six months of the prior exam.
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Now, over the past decade or so, a
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multidisciplinary team of experts has come
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together and really formed a comprehensive
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system which allows for better standardization
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of the terminology, technique, and
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interpretation of liver lesions in patients
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who are at risk for hepatocellular carcinoma.
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Now, this system is called LI-RADS; it stands
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for Liver Imaging Reporting and Data System.
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And we're going to cover some aspects of
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LI-RADS in the following videos, but for a
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more comprehensive look at this, there's a
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free resource that is given out by the
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ACR; it's accessible on their website that I
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highly recommend you look at and go through
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to better understand how to use
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this lexicon when describing liver lesions.
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The first thing that's important
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to know is when to use LI-RADS.
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There are specific criteria for this.
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It is used only in adult patients, so
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18 years of age or older.
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Patients who are adults and have
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cirrhosis or chronic hepatitis B infection,
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or a history of prior HCC.
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The only caveat
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with patients who have cirrhosis is
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that it excludes certain etiologies of
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cirrhosis, including congenital hepatic
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fibrosis or vascular disorders such as
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hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia,
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portal vein thrombosis,
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and Budd-Chiari syndrome.
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Anything else?
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Besides the congenital hepatic fibrosis or
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vascular etiologies, the atherosclerosis,
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we can apply the LYRADS lexicon.
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Now LYRADS, uh, separates liver lesions into
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multiple groups or categories, and for the
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purposes of this discussion, I'm going to sort
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of separate them into three clusters of groups.
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The first one is going to include those studies,
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those patients who have absolutely normal exams.
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These are termed negative studies.
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And these are patients who can then re-undergo
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their surveillance study in six months' time.
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Under this category, I'm also going to
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include the LYRADS not categorizable, or NC.
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These are patients who have studies that
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are inadequate for interpretation due to
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image emission or degradation, and for
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these ones, you're going to have to get a
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repeat exam in no later than three months'
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time, and you may change the imaging
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modality that you use in these instances.
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Also, I'm going to include under the first
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group is LI-RADS 1 lesions and LI-RADS 2 lesions.
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Now, LI-RADS 1 lesions are lesions
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that are definitely benign.
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We're not worried about these at all.
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The risk of developing hepatocellular
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carcinoma is 0 percent risk.
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These include lesions such as cysts
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or hemangiomas, many of the liver
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lesions that we've covered in the
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benign liver talk in this case series.
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LI-RADS 2 lesions are what
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we call probably benign.
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For practical purposes, these are
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also going to be benign lesions.
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The risk of HCC or hepatocellular
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carcinoma in these is about 16%.
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Both these sets of patients can return to
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surveillance in six months' time if we identify
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and classify the lesion as LI-RADS 1 or 2.
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The next group that I'm going to talk
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about, the other spectrum, are going
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to be LI-RADS tumor in vein, TIV.
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In this instance, you may or may not see a
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liver lesion, but you unequivocally see tumor
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thrombus inside one of the hepatic vessels.
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Many of these patients will end up
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having hepatocellular carcinoma, but not
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all of them will necessarily have HCC.
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And so, when you recognize this and
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you don't see a liver lesion with
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HCC features, often needs to go to
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multidisciplinary conference, and this may
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require biopsy to confirm the diagnosis.
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The other lesion I'm going to put
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in this category is LI-RADS MRLM.
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These lesions are lesions that are
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almost certainly going to be malignant,
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but are less likely to be HCC.
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The risk of HCC in these
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patients is about 37 percent or so.
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So in this category, we're going to
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talk about things that are metastases,
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angiocarcinoma, basically other malignant
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lesions that can occur in the liver
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that are not hepatocellular carcinomas.
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That brings us to the category in
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between over here that consists
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of LI-RADS lesions 3, 4, and 5.
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So we'll spend a little bit of time
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talking about these lesions because
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these are the ones where they may end
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up becoming hepatocellular carcinoma.
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So when we evaluate patients with HCC, and we've
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sort of excluded categories 1 and 3 over
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there, the first thing we need to look for is
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the presence of arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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So we look for arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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Hyperenhancement, and specifically
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we look for something that we call non-
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RIM arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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What that means is when you see a liver lesion
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and it enhances in the arterial phase, it's
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not the periphery of it that's enhancing,
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but actually the internal content within
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it that's getting brighter post-contrast.
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So we look for non-RIM arterial
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phase hyperenhancement.
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We assess whether it's present or
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absent. So in this case, we'll say no; in
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this case, we'll say yes, it's present.
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Then we look at the size of the
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liver lesion itself in millimeters.
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We break this up into several categories:
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Is it less than 20 millimeters?
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Is it greater than or equal to 20 millimeters?
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Is it less than 10 millimeters?
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Between 10 to 19 millimeters?
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Or is it greater than or equal to 20 millimeters?
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So we look for the presence of
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non-RIM arterial hyperenhancement.
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Is it present?
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Is it absent?
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What's the size of the lesion?
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And then we look for our final
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secondary imaging features:
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Is there a presence of a pseudocapsule?
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Is there a presence of washout?
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And specifically, non-peripheral washout.
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Means not the outside of it that's
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washing out, but the inside of it.
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Or is there interval growth?
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As stipulated earlier.
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If lesions have none of these features,
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do they have one of these features?
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Or do they have two of these features?
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Now we can start to sort of fill in
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our table and categorize these lesions.
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If you have no arterial phase hyperenhancement,
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you're going to have no secondary features,
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doesn't matter what the size is,
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you're going to qualify it as a LI-RADS 3.
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Over here, if you have no arterial phase
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hyperenhancement, it's less than 20 millimeters.
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You have one of these three features over here,
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it's going to qualify as a LI-RADS 3 still.
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If you have two of those features,
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it's going to bump it up to a 4.
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Non-RIM arterial phase hyperenhancement,
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more than 20 millimeters.
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And it has one feature, or it has two features,
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you're going to bump it up to a LI-RADS 4.
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So, none of these will fall into the
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category of LI-RADS 5, because in order
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to call something a LI-RADS 5, you need
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non-RIM arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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So if we now fill in this portion of the
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table, you have arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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It's a small lesion, less than
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10 millimeters, no secondary features.
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This will be maintained at 3.
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Arterial phase hyperenhancement, small
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lesion, you have one feature or two features.
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You're going to keep this as a 4
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because of the small size.
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If you go in that middle category, 10 to 19,
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you have arterial phase hyperenhancement between
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10 and 19 millimeters, no other features.
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This is going to maintain a LI-RADS 3.
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10 to 19 millimeters, and it has two features.
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Well, that's going to be bumped up to a 5.
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We'll fill in this box last.
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Let's go to 20 millimeters, non-RIM
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arterial phase hyperenhancement, more than
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20 millimeters, no additional features.
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We're going to keep it as a LI-RADS 4.
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But, if it has one or more features,
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it's going to bump it up to a 5.
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Final thing I'll draw over here is that if it's
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a lesion between ten and nineteen millimeters
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with arterial phase hyperenhancement,
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and it has one of these three features, it
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could either be a LI-RADS 4 or a 5,
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depending on which of these features it has.
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If the feature is a pseudocapsule,
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we're going to call it a 4.
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If the feature is non-peripheral
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washout or interval growth, we're
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going to bump it up to a 5.
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And, as a result of sort of qualifying these
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things, what they really mean from a practical
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perspective is a LI-RADS 3 lesion will have
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about a 37 percent chance of malignancy.
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If you call it a LI-RADS 3, you'll do a
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surveillance study in 3 to 6 months' time.
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A LI-RADS 4 lesion, chance of malignancy
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is going to go up to about 74%.
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And this may require discussion
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at a multidisciplinary tumor board,
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may require biopsy.
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Whereas, finally, a LI-RADS 5 lesion,
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you're going to be about 95 percent
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sure that it's going to be an HCC.
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No need to biopsy this lesion.
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Next step here is you discuss it in
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a multidisciplinary conference to
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discuss management of the lesion.
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What do we do next and how do we treat it?
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