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LI-RADS 5 – Size, Psuedo Capsule, & NPWO

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0:01

Here's a patient with cirrhosis

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who's getting a screening study to

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look for hepatocellular carcinoma.

0:05

Go ahead and start looking

0:06

at some of the images.

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So here we have the post-contrast images,

0:11

arterial, portal venous, and equilibrium phase.

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And I want to focus on this lesion

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that we see here in the hepatic dome.

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Here's the T1 FATSAT post-contrast

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arterial image, portal venous, equilibrium

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phase image, and this is the lesion.

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You can see that it's, um, sort of centered

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in segment 7, segment 8, probably at the

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borderline of those two segments.

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And it demonstrates unequivocal non-

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rim arterial phase hyperenhancement.

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Now unlike a lot of the lesions that we've

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seen so far, this one's a little bit larger.

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If we were to measure this, this

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falls above a 20 millimeter radius.

0:51

Range and size, right?

0:52

So we measure it from here to here, certainly

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larger than 20 millimeters or 2 centimeters.

0:57

It has arterial phase hyperenhancement,

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and we now have to look at our remaining

1:01

post-contrast images to figure out what

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Lyrads category that we put it into.

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So we move on to the portal venous phase images.

1:08

The inside of it looks pretty

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similar to the liver parenchyma.

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I can't say there's washout based on this image.

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And there's probably a little rim.

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I would qualify this as a little rim that's

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surrounding this, a little pseudocapsule.

1:19

If we look at the equilibrium phase

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images, we can see that the inside

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of it unequivocally washes out.

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It is darker than the adjacent parenchyma.

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The outside of it has a little

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rim as well surrounding it.

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And so when we look at those, uh, we

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add these observations to our lesion,

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we see that there is unequivocal

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washout, which is non-peripheral, right?

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The inside of it is washing out.

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We see that there is a pseudocapsule.

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And so all these things allow us to

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qualify this lesion as a Lyrads 5 lesion.

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This is a lesion that we are almost certain that

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this is going to be an HCC with about 95%

1:57

certainty, if not a little bit more than that.

1:59

This can be presented at a tumor board.

2:02

We can start discussing treatment

2:03

strategies in order to move on to

2:06

the next step for this patient.

Report

Faculty

Mahan Mathur, MD

Associate Professor, Division of Body Imaging; Vice Chair of Education, Dept of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging

Yale School of Medicine

Tags

Neoplastic

MRI

Liver

Gastrointestinal (GI)

Body

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