Interactive Transcript
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So let's talk about case four.
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So where we have a 66 year old woman with history of hepatitis C
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and endometrioid carcinoma status
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posts tabso one year prior.
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The patient reports localized pain in the right fifth rib following
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a minor fall, which was worse than by breathing.
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She currently is undergoing weekly radiation and
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chemotherapy and follows regularly with her gynon provider.
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She scheduled for reassessment of disease staging
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via PET scan.
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So, let's see what we see in the reading room.
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So it catches our eye well, perhaps this
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does.
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an intensely hypermetabolic lesion in the right fifth Rib
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posteriorly was noted to have our underlying letter component
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by the
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nuclear medicine doc
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punctate hyper metabolic lesion in the right seventh rib,
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in addition to there's an ill-defined hyper metabolic
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activity in the left pelvic side wall.
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So overall the concern is obvious lesions
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consistent with metastases.
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so next steps
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Patients referred to Interventional Radiology for biopsy
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of one of the hypermetabolic lesions and the
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rib lesion was deemed to be the most appropriate one to Target.
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So during biops even obvious lesion in the rib, should the cartil of
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the cephalot portion of lesion be targeted.
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Well, the cephalon region should be
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targeted and the region being is because as we can see here.
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The neurovascular actually courses
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within the groove just below the ribs. So
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if we go
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Below the ribs. We would be perhaps at
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risk of traversing the neurovascular bundle. So
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we go above cephalot to avoid
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these to prevent bleeding and pain and other neuropathies
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that could result.
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so next steps
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the patient undergoese an uncomplicated CT guided
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core needle biopsy.
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we see the
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operator traversing the skin
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soft tissues and into the
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fifth plus year rib lesion question
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Sample is submitted in formal and incentive pathology.
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So the path report.
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Shows what benign fibrous tissue with woven and
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Lamela bone but no evidence of malignancy seen
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in spite of this evidence that perhaps the
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patient has multiple metastatic Foci
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seen on their nuclear medicine
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Imaging scan.
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So what are our next steps?
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In the intervening months the patient continues to report worsening of
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back pain the pain no longer control with oxycodone and
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its growing to become rather diffuse. She's referred
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for repeat PET scan.
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So in the reading room now.
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What are we seeing?
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So impression here is focused on the following.
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There's progression now of radio Trace uptake in
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the previous observed rib lesions.
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This one is the one that we targeted before so we'll
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use this one for reference.
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There's now a new pathologic fraction with mass in the
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posterior. Right fifth. There's also a new focus of
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uptake at T10.
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Findings overall a consistent with progression of metastatic disease.
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So what next?
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so now we take
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a more medial route. We target the soft tissue
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focus and question within this rib that's
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expanding it and we target the soft
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tissue component.
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Being sure that we avoid traversing a
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violating the pleura that's underlying it.
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And so in this repeat CT guided biopsy of the posterior
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fifth rib lesion.
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We actually using softer approach
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and that entails using a side
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cutting.
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Biopsy needle that's Advanced into the soft tissue
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area pretty easily in this particular case a biopsy
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throw that about 10 millimeters
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is Advanced ensuring that
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the tip does not end up Crossing through the lesion into the plural risk
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anumothorax.
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What is the path report say here?
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Sample that was fixed in formula and sent for pathology demonstrates
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metastatic and no carcinoma consistent
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with malarian origin.
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This is likely metastasis from the patient's
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primary endometrioid adenocarcinoma.
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So what feature of this patient's initial lesion most
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likely led to a negative tissue diagnosis following biopsy. Was
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it patient movement during the procedure?
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Was it the size of the rib lesion? Was it
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the scan soft tissue component, or was it
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the pathologist error?
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It was a scan tissue that was soft tissue
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specifically in this question. What we see
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here is not really the expanse Style.
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Soft issue lesion that we saw in the more recent expanded,
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Mass.
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This was just pretty much bone small loose and lesion and as
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we know the soft tissue lesions end up being the ones that
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have the higher diagnostic heel.
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So we know that metastatic bone lesions May induce reactive deposition of
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osteus material obscuring specimens of
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diagnose utility soft. As you components are
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more likely to contain identifiably malignant tissue, which
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is why we had higher diagnostic
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yield and the subsequent case.
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In conclusion oncology team is notified of the histologic
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diagnosis and response to upstaging of
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the patient's primary cancer radiation and chemotherapy regimens are
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escalated.