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T3 Disease with Lymph Nodes – Nodal Staging

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And so, first of all, what is the nodal staging,

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and what constitutes regional versus

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non-regional lymph nodes and rectal cancer?

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So, let's first look at the TNM staging of

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rectal cancer, and the TNM staging of rectal cancer,

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as it is outlined in the AJCC 8th

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edition, is based on the number of lymph nodes.

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And so, N1A is when you have a single metastatic node

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N1B is when you have two to three metastatic nodes.

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N2A is when it is four to six metastatic

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nodes, and N2B is when it is seven or more.

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So, as you can see, the number of lymph

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nodes is what governs the nodal staging.

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Now, for practical purposes, we don't typically

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dwell on, you know, most sites, they usually

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in their reports, they say, is there or

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is there not a positive lymph node present?

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And they give a rough estimate

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of the size of the affected node.

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And a rough estimate of the number of

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affected, or you don't have to nickel and

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dime in terms of the precise number of nodes.

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The more generic sort of concept is to look

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for the presence or absence of lymph nodes.

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So, that's sort of nodal staging.

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Now, in the nodal staging, there is one component

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that is very key, and that is what falls in N1C,

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and that is referred to as a tumor deposit.

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And we'll talk about what a tumor deposit

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means and what the implications are.

Report

Faculty

Mukesh Harisinghani, MD

Professor of Radiology at Harvard Medical School and Director of Abdominal MRI at the Massachusetts General Hospital

Harvard Medical School & Massachusetts General Hospital

Tags

Rectal/Anal

Neoplastic

MRI

Gastrointestinal (GI)

Body

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