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Wk 3, Case 4 - Review

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This is a case of a 69-year-old with

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a PSA of 7 and no urinary symptoms.

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We have our axial T2, axial

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ADC map, and axial high B value.

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It's a 1600 interpolated image

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and an early arterial phase image.

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And we'll start by just noticing that the ADC map

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and the high B value image are pretty low quality.

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And I know when I see a case that's got low quality

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ADC map and high B value that it's going to be hard.

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And I may not do as good a job as I

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normally would because those are the

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key sequences in the peripheral zone.

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And when they don't look really

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nice, your confidence goes down.

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So if you feel the same way, you

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know, you got good company here.

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So we'll start in the peripheral zone.

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So in the T2 images, the peripheral zone is a

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little heterogeneous, got some streaky areas.

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Uh, but I don't see a mass that I

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feel like I could pluck off the page.

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Maybe there's a little bit of

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decreased signal down in this region.

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We'll look over on the ADC map, and corresponding

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to this area here, there is a focal black hole,

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um, on the ADC map, and it's not letting me draw

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a circle and show you, uh, what the ADC value was.

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If we look kind of back in the report

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for this, the ADC value was 700, right?

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1000 threshold that I like to use.

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It makes you worry about something

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being a PI-RADS 4 or 5 lesion.

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Given its size, less than a

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centimeter, it's going to be a 4.

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The problem is it's not bright

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on the high B value image.

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Maybe it's a little bright, but it's not.

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Is there a focal contrast enhancement?

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I don't think you can say that there is.

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Um, and then, is there even

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something there on the T2 image?

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Well, towards the apex, sometimes the axial

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images cannot be as sensitive because the gland

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curves around and you're kind of imaging in plane.

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If you look on a coronal image, in

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this region, so let's scroll back.

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Now there is some abnormal T2 signal in the area.

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It's a bit wedge-shaped, um, on T2, but

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it looks focal on the ADC map.

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So, if we were going strictly by PIRADS,

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this should be called a PIRADS 3 lesion.

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There's a well-defined area of diffusion

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restriction on the ADC map that's not

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corroborated on the high B value images,

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and there's no enhancement, so it's a, no

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focal enhancement, so it's a PI-RADS 3.

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Um, This case I think was read before we were

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using PIRADS, so this lesion was biopsied.

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This came back as a Gleason 3

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plus 3 or Gleason 6 disease.

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And even if you thought there was some enhancement

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here and upgraded to a 4, it would still have come

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back as a Gleason 6 disease, Gleason 6 neoplasm.

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So the thing to remember is that the role of

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MR, right, is to reduce the number of men who

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are getting a biopsy, not eliminate, and also to

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help correlate, you know, the size and location

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of a cancer with what you get on the biopsy.

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All right, so not everything you call PIRADS4 is

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going to be a significant neoplasm, and that's okay.

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In fact, hopefully you'll miss a lot of PIRADS,

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sorry, you'll miss a lot of Gleason 6s, because

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we don't always even want to see those, and

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hopefully that the number of Gleason 6s that

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you biopsy from PI-RADS 4 lesions will be small.

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So, here's an example of where the diffusion

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really makes you call this at least a, a PI-RADS 3.

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Um, I've been fooled a lot of times by the

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starkness of the black hole on the ADC map

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and not seeing anything on the high B value.

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And I've caught a lot of those 4s

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when I should have called them 3s.

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And almost all of those, even if they

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come back as Gleason 6s, or as nothing.

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So even after, you know, 20 years of doing this,

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you still sometimes find yourself struggling

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a little bit on these hard ones, and it always

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seems to be in the cases where the ADC map and

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the high B value images are pretty low quality.

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So moving on from the peripheral

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zone, we have the transition zone.

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The transition zone is heterogeneous, it's

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low signal, there's nothing lenticular.

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There's nothing pushing things out of the way.

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Um, this is a nice example of some anterior stroma.

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So again, right, it's chrysentric.

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It's not lenticular.

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It's not pushing this.

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It's not, you know, going like this.

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Flattening the anterior transition zone.

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It does show low signal on the ADC map.

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It doesn't show high signal on the high B value.

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But again, the quality is not that good.

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But most importantly, it shows no enhancement.

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Alright, so this is spanning the entire anterior

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aspect of the transition zone like the stroma does.

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There's no enhancement early.

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If I showed you the delayed images,

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there'd be no enhancement late.

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Uh, this is a nice example of anterior stroma.

Report

Case Discussion

Case Report

Faculty

Daniel Cornfeld, MD

Chief Radiologist

Mātai

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Prostate/seminal vesicles

MRI

Genitourinary (GU)

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