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Advanced Imaging for Salivary Gland Neoplasms – Summary

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At Johns Hopkins,

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we tend to look at the diffusion-weighted imaging

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and the ADC values in a qualitative fashion.

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There have been publications that have looked at

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ADC values with regard to distinguishing between

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benign and malignant neoplasms of these salivary

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glands, and the number that has been suggested,

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at least in some of the publications,

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is that this value of greater than 1.8 times ten

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to the three millimeter squared cut-off for

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distinguishing pleomorphic adenomas

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versus malignancy.

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The neoplasm that sort of confounds us, however,

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is the Warthin's tumor.

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This is a tumor that often is darker

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in signal intensity on T2-weighted scans

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and may be hypercellular,

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and therefore its values may overlap that

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of the malignant values. However,

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when you have something that's pretty bright on

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the DWI and shows high numbers on the ADC values,

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it really suggests that it's

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a pleomorphic adenoma.

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We do not routinely do perfusion imaging for

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parotid or other salivary gland neoplasms.

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Nonetheless,

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there have been some publications

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which you can see here,

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that have suggested that with the dynamic contrast-enhanced technique you can see

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a slow progressive perfusion,

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which kind of makes sense on the post-gad scans

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where we see the pleomorphic adenoma imbibe more

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and more contrast on delayed imaging, as opposed to

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Warthin's tumor, which has a faster

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uptake and a faster washout

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when you look at the perfusion maps.

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And a malignancy,

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which is fast uptake but a flatter,

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slower washout.

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So if you have ADC values that are overlapping

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between Warthin's tumors and malignancy,

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some people have said try perfusion-weighted imaging. To be honest,

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the aspiration of parotid masses is pretty simple

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to do and doesn't require large

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needles, and therefore,

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going with cytology or a true-cut needle biopsy

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of a parotid mass will solve this.

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And here are some of the values that

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are given for blood volume,

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blood flow, and mean transit time

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for various tumors,

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including pleomorphic adenomas and

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Warthin's tumors versus malignancies.

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If you have pleomorphic adenomas,

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it makes sense that you would have monomorphic

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adenomas. In general, these lesions,

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which are benign tumors,

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have similar imaging characteristics

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to pleomorphic adenomas,

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with the exception that they often are slightly

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less bright on the T2-weighted scan.

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So you have myoepitheliomas,

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canalicular adenomas, and basal cell adenomas

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as examples of monomorphic adenomas.

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So I believe I have one case I'd like

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to show you of monomorphic adenoma.

Report

Description

Faculty

David M Yousem, MD, MBA

Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean

Johns Hopkins University

Tags

Salivary Glands

Neuroradiology

Neoplastic

MRI

Head and Neck

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