Interactive Transcript
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So the following patient is a 65-year-old
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gentleman with cirrhosis, and they're looking
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for hepatocellular carcinoma by doing an MRI.
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So let's go ahead and look
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at some of the images.
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We'll jump right to the post-contrast images.
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Now I want you to focus on this
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lesion over here in segment 7.
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Here we have the T1 Fatsat.
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That post-contrast image in the arterial
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phase, this is the portal venous phase.
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And this lesion, as I said, in the
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segment 7, if we were just to evaluate
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it quickly, we'll notice that there's
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non-RIM arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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If you were to measure it, you get it just
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at around 2 centimeters, so we'll mark
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it as greater or equal to 20 millimeters.
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And remember, when you have a lesion
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of this size demonstrating non-RIM
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arterial phase hyperenhancement,
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you just need one more feature.
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Either washout, pseudocapsule,
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or growth to call it a LI-RADS V.
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If you look at the portal venous
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phase, you can see a very, very thin
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rim of enhancement surrounding this.
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No real internal washout, but the
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rim is present, so the presence of
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that pseudocapsule will then allow
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us to call this a LI-RADS V lesion.
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And given the relatively small size and
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location, this was deemed to be amenable for
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percutaneous ablation, which was performed.
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And this is what the lesion looks
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like after the ablation, done a few
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months after the treatment itself.
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So this is a T1-weighted
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image with fat saturation.
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We've given contrast.
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We have the arterial phase over here.
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We have the portal venous phase over here.
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And these also are subtracted images.
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I really do like looking at the subtracted
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images when we have post-ablative HCCs in order
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to sort of take away all that potential fat.
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hyperintense T1 content that can be
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seen with these ablation cavities.
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But you can see the ablation cavity over here
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in segment 7 appearing completely avascular.
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It's important to kind of
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scroll through it up or down.
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You don't see any nodules of arterial
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hyperenhancement, no nodules that
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wash out, nothing that tells us
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that there's any viable
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tumor left in this lesion.
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So this is a successful
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treatment of a LI-RADS V lesion.
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And so, this is something that requires, uh,
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routine follow-up every couple of months to
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make sure that no disease develops within this.
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And of course, you do need the follow
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up to make sure no disease develops
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in other portions of the liver.
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And so, let's relook at this lesion
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in a couple more months to see
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how it's developed in the interim.
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So now, if you look at this lesion, it looks
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a little bit different than it did previously.
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So, the same sort of sequences we're going
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to put up, T1-weighted, Fatsat, post-
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contrast, arterial phase, portal venous phase.
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As I said, I like using subtraction images when
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I look at these ablation cavities to make sure
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all the hyperintense T1 content is removed.
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And over time, the cavity itself will
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typically diminish in size, so this cavity
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is smaller than what it was previously.
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But what's more concerning is that, in
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the interim, this nodule here, arterial
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hyperenhancement has developed.
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This nodule is right at the periphery
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of this cavity, inseparable from it.
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Hard to argue that there's a washout
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within this nodule because the internal
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content of this nodule looks very
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similar to the liver parenchyma.
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Maybe there's a rim of enhancement surrounding
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it, but those findings are sort of irrelevant.
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The key finding is that you have an
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arterially enhancing nodule that is now
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new and it's associated with this cavity.
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And this means that there is recurrent disease.
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Multidisciplinary tumor board
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to assess what the best next step is in
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order to treat that area of recurrence.
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