Interactive Transcript
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This patient is, uh, 50 years old, female,
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with known cirrhosis, and this is being done
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to evaluate for, uh, hepatocellular carcinoma.
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So we'll start looking at the images.
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In this instance, I'm also going to start
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off with the T2-weighted images, and I want
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to focus on this particular cut over here.
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And so this is a T2-weighted image with
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fat saturation, and we can see that
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almost the entire left hepatic lobe
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has a very, very abnormal signal in it.
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And we see the nodularity of the
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liver; that's the known cirrhosis.
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This sort of liver signal is relatively normal
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over here, but this is way too hyperintense on
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the T2-weighted images, so it's quite abnormal.
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We see foci of that sort of abnormal
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signal within areas in the right
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hepatic lobe, but most of the right
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hepatic lobe looks relatively spared.
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So we're going to have to
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investigate that further.
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The other thing that we see on this image
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is we see a portion of the right portal
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vein over here with an expected flow void.
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Don't see the left portal vein.
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We would expect it to be in this location,
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but inside of it we don't see that flow void.
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And in fact, what we do see is signal
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that is equivalent to what we see spread
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throughout this left hepatic lobe.
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So we'll investigate that further by
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looking at the post-contrast images.
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Here we have our post-contrast images,
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T1, Fatsat, post-contrast, arterial
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phase; this is the portal venous phase.
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Very difficult to sort of confidently assess
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what's going on in this left hepatic lobe.
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We can see over here, abnormal signals spread
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throughout, maybe patchy areas of enhancement.
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Difficult to say if there's any discrete
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non-RIM arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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Very difficult to know if those same areas are
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definitely washing out of their pseudocapsule.
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It's just a very, very infiltrative
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tumor that's spreading throughout
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all aspects of the left hepatic lobe.
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Within the left portal vein,
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we can see that it's expanded.
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It has that gray signal within it in both
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the arterial and portal venous phase images.
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And so whenever we see that sort of gray
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signal, be worried about tumor thrombus.
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Compare this to the right portal vein,
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which is patent and filling with contrast
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over here, so it looks nice and white.
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And so we're really left with
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findings of, uh, tumor thrombus.
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On this cut, the tumor thrombus is
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in the left portal vein, and the
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entire left hepatic lobe is abnormal.
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But it's very difficult to qualify what
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that abnormality is, you know, in terms
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of its arterial enhancement and washout.
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So based on the LI-RADS lexicon,
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the presence of tumor thrombus
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qualifies this lesion as LI-RADS category TIV.
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Unlike our prior case where we had more
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discrete mass with arterial hyperenhancement
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and washout, that's not as present in this case.
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And so this would potentially go to a tumor
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board with this designation of tumor in
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vein, and in order to make sure we knew we
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were treating a hepatocellular carcinoma, we'd
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probably have to biopsy something here for
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confirmation before we initiated or made
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any recommendations of the sort of treatment
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algorithm that this patient had to follow.
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