Interactive Transcript
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Okay, so now we'll talk about endometriosis.
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Again, this is a very common
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disease that we may see.
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when we're imaging our pelvic patients.
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So I'm going to spend quite a bit of
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time just talking about the disease
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process and the imaging appearances.
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So firstly, what is endometriosis?
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Well, endometriosis is when there is endometrial
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tissue that's located outside the uterus.
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So it's abnormal placement
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of endometrial tissue.
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And this is quite a common disease.
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It can affect up to 10 percent
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of reproductive-aged women.
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And the typical locations
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of endometriosis are here.
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Some of them are on the slide,
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but usually the ovaries tend to be
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involved, but there can be deposits of
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endometriosis all throughout the pelvis.
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So the uterine ligaments, the cul-de-sac,
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the peritoneum, fallopian tubes, retrosigmoid
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colon, and this makes it quite challenging.
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sometimes to diagnose because the deposits can
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be quite small and plaque-like in appearance.
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So as radiologists, it's important to be aware
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of these locations that are kind of atypical,
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but also very important for us to be aware of.
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So, I like to think about the rule
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of tens with endometriosis as well.
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So we know that up to 10 percent of
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women can be affected, but routine pelvic
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ultrasound accurately diagnoses endometriosis
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in only about 10 percent of cases.
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So if you think about that,
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that's actually quite significant.
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So, if a patient comes to your clinic or
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your hospital with possible endometriosis
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and you do a pelvic ultrasound, in 90 percent
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of cases, we're missing the endometriosis.
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So that's where MRI can really play
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a significant role, even higher than
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laparoscopy, as we'll learn shortly.
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Endometriosis, as we now know, is often
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under-recognized and under-treated, and
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some patients have a very protracted
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course and delayed diagnosis.
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The average time to diagnosis is seven years.
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So you can imagine if you're suffering with
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those symptoms for seven years, that's a long
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time to be going through without a diagnosis.
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We still don't really know what the
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pathogenesis of endometriosis is.
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There are several theories out there
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from retrograde menstruation to peritoneal
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metaplasia to transformation of stem cells.
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And we haven't really landed on the
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exact cause, but unfortunately these poor
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patients often undergo repeated imaging
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studies, sometimes with no solid diagnosis.
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And laparoscopy is often used for
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diagnosis and for treatment as well.
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And it's considered the gold
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standard, but it also, unfortunately,
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frequently underestimates the disease.
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And there is a high false negative
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rate for laparoscopy as well.
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And that's partially due to the fact that
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the laparoscopist can be blinded by the presence
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of adhesions and scarring, which prevents
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them from looking behind the uterus and into
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the posterior compartment of the pelvis.
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So deep deposits can be invisible to
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the laparoscopist, and that's kind of
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referred to as the iceberg phenomenon.
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So you might see one tiny little
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deposit, but you're not able to see
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deep to that in the OR, but luckily MRI
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does have a role to play there because
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we can visualize those structures.
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So what should we be
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looking for as radiologists?
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Well, we know that the ultrasound
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diagnosis of an endometrioma alone is
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really not enough because many patients
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may not have any ovarian involvement.
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So we can maximize our yield on
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ultrasound by up to 80 percent by
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looking for other manifestations.
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So that includes deep infiltrating disease
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of the bowel, deposits that might be present
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in the retro-cervical space, adjacent to
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the vagina, the bladder, and the ureter.
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And another feature that we can look
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for is frozen cul-de-sac, which is
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important for surgical planning.
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And I'll talk about that in just a moment.
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There's lots of peritoneal
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signs that we can also look for.
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And if we're not aware of these,
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obviously, we're going to miss them.
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So you don't know what you don't know, right?
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So.
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As long as we're aware of these
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peritoneal signs, we can start to look
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for them both on ultrasound and MRI.
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And some of those include filmy
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adhesions and kissing ovaries.
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So this is from abdominal imaging and just
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looks at the different types of endometriotic
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lesions on routine transvaginal ultrasound
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and expert-guided transvaginal ultrasound.
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So what is expert-guided ultrasound?
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Well, it's an ultrasound that's
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done in a dynamic way by an
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expert in gynecologic imaging.
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So many of us might be reporting pelvic
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ultrasounds once they've already been completed
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and the patient is no longer available.
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But these expert-guided ultrasounds actually
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are done by the radiologist on site in the
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room using some of the dynamic maneuvers like
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compression and different positions, et cetera.
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So you can see how the detection of
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abnormalities really increases when
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the expert-guided approach is used.
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So all radiologists really should be
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aware of these manifestations, even if
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you're not able to offer the service
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of an expert doing the ultrasound.
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