Second Edition
About the editors
Pelvic cancers usually require MR imaging and the revised and updated MRI Manual of Pelvic Cancer Second Edition contains chapters covering all the major pelvic cancers. There are also chapters dealing with basic pelvic anatomy, staging, and imaging techniques. The use of advanced MR techniques such as diffusion weighted imaging, dynamic contrast enhancement, and magnetic resonance spectroscopy is integrated appropriately.
Soo Y. S. K. Mak MBChB, MRCP(UK), FRCR is a Consultant Radiologist at The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK. She is an oncological radiologist specializing in cross-sectional imaging and PET CT.
The extensive use of high quality MR images makes this book an invaluable bench reference for all those required to be familiar with or report MRI pelvic cancer examinations. New to the Second Edition: • new imaging techniques as applicable to a number of pelvic cancers including cervical, endometrial, ovarian, and vaginal cancer • imaging findings post chemoradiation for cervical, rectal, bladder, and anal cancer • imaging findings in brachytherapy for prostate cancer • new penile cancer chapter A highly useful resource, this guide: • presents a comprehensive set of top-quality images of pelvic cancers • introduces pelvic cancer staging, MRI technique, and pelvic anatomy • provides a short account of each disease and a set of images demonstrating the tumor, node, and metastasis stages • contains illustrations of recurrent disease and appearances following chemoradiotherapy • discusses imaging before exenterative surgery and the imaging of metastatic disease within the pelvis
Bernadette M. Carrington MBChB, MRCP(UK), FRCR is a Consultant Radiologist at The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK and an Honorary Lecturer at the University of Manchester UK. She has vast oncology cross-sectional and PET CT experience and has written widely on oncology imaging topics.
Second Edition
• has a consistent format with the extensive use of high quality MR images of pelvic cancer to aid diagnosis
Paul A. Hulse B.Med.Sci. (Hons), BMBS, MRCP(UK), FRCR is a Consultant Radiologist at The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK. Dr Hulse is an experienced oncoradiologist specializing in cross-sectional and PET CT imaging.
MRI Manual of Pelvic Cancer
About the book
Mak Hulse Carrington
MRI Manual of Pelvic Cancer
MRI Manual of Pelvic Cancer Second Edition
Edited by
Soo Y. S. K. Mak Paul A. Hulse Bernadette M. Carrington
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MRI Manual of Pelvic Cancer
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MRI Manual of Pelvic Cancer Second Edition
Edited by Soo Y. S. K. Mak Consultant Radiologist Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK Paul A. Hulse Consultant Radiologist Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK Bernadette M. Carrington Consultant Radiologist Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
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First edition published in 2004 by Martin Dunitz, an imprint of the Taylor and Francis Group This edition published in 2012 by Informa Healthcare, Telephone House, 69-77 Paul Street, London EC2A 4LQ, UK. Simultaneously published in the USA by Informa Healthcare, 52 Vanderbilt Avenue, 7th Floor, New York, NY 10017, USA. Informa Healthcare is a trading division of Informa UK Ltd. Registered Office: 37–41 Mortimer Street, London W1T 3JH, UK. Registered in England and Wales number 1072954. #2012 Informa Healthcare, except as otherwise indicated No claim to original U.S. Government works Reprinted material is quoted with permission. Although every effort has been made to ensure that all owners of copyright material have been acknowledged in this publication, we would be glad to acknowledge in subsequent reprints or editions any omissions brought to our attention. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, unless with the prior written permission of the publisher or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London W1P 0LP, UK, or the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, USA (http://www.copyright.com/ or telephone 978-750-8400). Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. This book contains information from reputable sources and although reasonable efforts have been made to publish accurate information, the publisher makes no warranties (either express or implied) as to the accuracy or fitness for a particular purpose of the information or advice contained herein. The publisher wishes to make it clear that any views or opinions expressed in this book by individual authors or contributors are their personal views and opinions and do not necessarily reflect the views/opinions of the publisher. Any information or guidance contained in this book is intended for use solely by medical professionals strictly as a supplement to the medical professional’s own judgement, knowledge of the patient’s medical history, relevant manufacturer’s instructions and the appropriate best practice guidelines. Because of the rapid advances in medical science, any information or advice on dosages, procedures, or diagnoses should be independently verified. This book does not indicate whether a particular treatment is appropriate or suitable for a particular individual. Ultimately it is the sole responsibility of the medical professional to make his or her own professional judgements, so as appropriately to advise and treat patients. Save for death or personal injury caused by the publisher’s negligence and to the fullest extent otherwise permitted by law, neither the publisher nor any person engaged or employed by the publisher shall be responsible or liable for any loss, injury or damage caused to any person or property arising in any way from the use of this book. A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN-13: 9781841846767 Orders may be sent to: Informa Healthcare, Sheepen Place, Colchester, Essex CO3 3LP, UK Telephone: +44 (0)20 7017 5540 Email:
[email protected] Website: http://informahealthcarebooks.com/ Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data MRI manual of pelvic cancer / edited by Soo Y.S.K. Mak, Paul A. Hulse, and Bernadette M. Carrington. – 2nd ed. p. ; cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-84184-676-7 (hb : alk. paper) 1. Pelvis–Cancer–Magnetic resonance imaging. I. Mak, Soo Y. S. K. II. Hulse, Paul. III. Carrington, Bernadette M. [DNLM: 1. Pelvic Neoplasms–diagnosis–Atlases. 2. Magnetic Resonance Imaging–methods. WE 17] RC946.M75 2011 616.99’4736–dc23 2011017123
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This book is dedicated to Cuong, Joshua, and Alex Claire, Max, Felix, and Maxi Paddy, Rachel, and Helen
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Contents
Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . vii Preface. . . . . . . . . . . viii Acknowledgment . . . . . . . . . . . ix Abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . x 1. Diagnosis, staging, and follow-up of pelvic tumors: The role of MR imaging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Bernadette M. Carrington 2. MR imaging techniques in pelvic cancer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Andrew P. Jones, Rohit Kochhar, and Alison Kilburn 3. Anatomy of the pelvis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 James O’Connor and Paul A. Hulse 4. Cervical cancer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Bernadette M. Carrington 5. Endometrial cancer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 Maryna Brochwicz-Lewinski 6. Ovarian cancer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 Soo Y. S. K. Mak and Prakash Manoharan 7. Vaginal cancer M. Ben Taylor
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8. Vulval cancer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135 Maryna Brochwicz-Lewinski and Jane Hawnaur 9. Rectal cancer Mike Dobson
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10. Anal cancer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 178 Rohit Kochhar and Paul A. Hulse 11. Bladder cancer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 201 Suzanne Bonington 12. Prostate cancer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 220 Claire Barker 13. Penile cancer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 236 Rohit Kochhar and M. Ben Taylor 14. Pelvic metastases Fenella Wong
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15. MRI of residual and recurrent tumor before pelvic clearance surgery . . . . . . . . 288 Bernadette M. Carrington Index . . . . 315
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Contributors
Claire Barker
Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
Suzanne Bonington
Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
Maryna Brochwicz-Lewinski Trust, Stockport, UK Bernadette M. Carrington Mike Dobson Preston, UK
Stepping Hill Hospital, Stockport NHS Foundation
Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,
Jane Hawnaur Central Manchester and Manchester Children’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK Paul A. Hulse
Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
Andrew P. Jones Alison Kilburn
Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
Rohit Kochhar
Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
Soo Y. S. K. Mak
Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
Prakash Manoharan
Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
James O’Connor School of Cancer and Enabling Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK M. Ben Taylor Fenella Wong
Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
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Preface
Magnetic resonance imaging continues to be an invaluable imaging tool in the staging of pelvic malignancy. In the second edition of this book, the chapters have been extensively revised and incorporate the 2010 UICC/AJCC staging system. A new chapter deals with penile cancer. The evidence for and sensible use of advanced MR techniques such as diffusion-weighted imaging, dynamic contrast enhancement, and magnetic resonance spectroscopy are discussed. There are sections which deal with pitfalls in pelvic cancer MR imaging interpretation. Our intention is that this book will remain a useful bench reference for radiographers who image and radiologists who report pelvic MR examinations as well as being of interest to all those involved in the clinical management of pelvic cancer. Soo Y. S. K. Mak Paul A. Hulse Bernadette M. Carrington
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Acknowledgment
Once again a tremendous amount of team work has contributed to this book. In particular, we thank our secretaries Kami Ramnarain, Liz Stockton, Angela Squire, and Jackie Nevins for their work in helping us prepare our manuscripts and images, Kath Westwell our CRIS manager for performing many word searches, and our MR radiographers for constant high-quality imaging. Finally, we should like to acknowledge our contributors for their extremely hard work and patience in both writing and revising their chapters and we also acknowledge contributions of the following from the first edition: Rhidian Bramley, Neelam Dugar, Jeremy Lawrance, Sue Roach and Susan Todd.
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Abbreviations ADC AFP AIN AJCC APR BLADE BPH CA-125 CEA Cho Ci CIN Cr CRT CSI CT DCE DRE DTPA DWI ERC EBRT EGFR EMVI EORTC EPI EUA FAME 5-FU FDG PET-CT FFE FIESTA FIGO FISP FOV FS FSE Gd GE GEPDI GI HCG HIV HNPCC
Apparent diffusion coefficient Alpha-fetoprotein Anal intraepithelial neoplasia American Joint Committee on Cancer Abdominoperineal resection Periodically rotated overlapping parallel lines with enhanced reconstruction Benign prostatic hypertrophy Cancer/carbohydrate antigen-125 Carcinoembryonic antigen Choline Citrate Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia Creatine Chemoradiotherapy Chemical shift imaging Computed tomography Dynamic contrast enhancement/enhanced Digital rectal examination Diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid Diffusion-weighted imaging Endorectal coil External beam radiotherapy Extracellular growth factor receptors Extramural vascular invasion European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Echo planar imaging Examination under anesthesia Three-dimensional fast SPGR pulse sequence 5-Fluorouracil 18-Fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography and computed tomography Fast field echo Fast imaging employing steady state acquisition Federation Internationale Gynecologie et Oncologie Fast imaging steady state precession Field of view Fat saturation Fast spin echo Gadolinium Gradient echo Gradient echo proton density image Gastrointestinal Human chorionic gonadotrophin Human immunodeficiency virus Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer
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ABBREVIATIONS
HPV HRT IVC IAF IOG JSM KRAS gene LAVA MIP MR MRS MSAD NICE PACS PA p53 PIN PROPELLER PSA Rb RF ROC ROI SCC SNP SPAIR SPIO SPIR STIR SV T1WI T2WI TEs THRIVE Tis TME TNM TR TRUS TSE TURP UICC UKCCR US USPIOs VAIN VIBE VIN
Human papillomavirus Hormone replacement therapy Inferior vena cava Ischioanal fossa Improving outcomes guidance Jewett-Strong-Marshall v-Ki-ras2 Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog Liver acquisition with volume acceleration Maximum intensity projection Magnetic resonance MR spectroscopy Maximum short axis diameter National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence Picture archiving and communication system(s) Polyamine Protein 53 gene Prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia Periodically rotated overlapping parallel lines with enhanced reconstruction (Siemens) Prostate-specific antigen Retinoblastoma tumor suppressor gene Radiofrequency Receiver operating characteristics Region of interest Squamous cell carcinoma Single nucleotide polymorphism Spectral adiabatic inversion recovery Super-paramagnetic iron oxide Spectral presaturation with inversion recovery Short tau inversion recovery Seminal vesicle T1-weighted image(s) T2-weighted image(s) Echo times Ultrafast spoiled gradient echo Carcinoma in situ Total mesorectal excision Tumor node metastasis Repetition time Transrectal ultrasound Turbo spin echo Transurethral resection of the prostate Union Internationale Contre le Cancer United Kingdom Coordinating Committee on Cancer Research Ultrasound Ultrasmall paramagnetic iron oxide Vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia Modified three-dimensional fast gradient echo sequence Vulval intraepithelial neoplasia
xi
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1 Diagnosis, staging, and follow-up of pelvic tumors: The role of MR imaging Bernadette M. Carrington
INTRODUCTION Cancer is due to an abnormal proliferation of cells which are resistant to normal regulatory mechanisms and which have the propensity to infiltrate the host organ, to invade locally and to activate mechanisms which allow more widespread dissemination through the body via blood vessels or lymphatics. Critical initial steps in cancer management are tumor confirmation by histological diagnosis and determination of extent by staging. This fundamental information is central to all management decisions and provides prognostic information. Accurate stratification of patients by tumor type and stage is also a prerequisite of cancer research, enabling valid comparison of outcomes between treatment groups. Objective assessment of treatment response is required to facilitate further management decisions and accurately evaluate the efficacy of treatment regimens. MR imaging plays an important part in pelvic cancer staging and treatment response assessment. Functional MR imaging offers sophisticated tumor analysis and permits more individualized prognostic information, treatment planning and response evaluation.
TUMOR DIAGNOSIS Tissue confirmation of malignancy is required wherever possible. This may be achieved by cytological analysis of surface accessible lesions, via needle biopsy of deeper masses (often image-guided) or by excision or incision biopsy, which involves resection of all or part of the tumor respectively. Excision biopsy is ideal since it allows accurate histopathological staging of the primary tumor and offers a potential cure. Most pelvic tumors are diagnosed by clinical examination and biopsy at the time of cystoscopy, colposcopy, or rigid sigmoidoscopy. Occasionally, examination under anesthesia is required. MR imaging is then used to locally stage the tumor, and computed tomography (CT) of the thorax and abdomen is performed to look for disseminated metastases. Ultrasound, either transabdominal or transrectal, can be used for primary tumor assessment but is inferior to MRI in depiction of local spread and the detection of regional lymph node metastases.
MR imaging allows multiplanar assessment of tumor extent within and beyond the organ of origin. Two- to threemillimeter thin-section (“high-resolution”) turbo spin echo T2weighted sequences are needed, usually in the orthogonal planes but occasionally utilizing off-axis imaging perpendicular to the tumor. The intramuscular injection of smooth muscle relaxants such as hyoscine butylbromide (Buscopan1) has been shown to improve image quality and diagnostic confidence in pelvic cancer imaging. In addition to imaging the true pelvis, it is recommended that at least one MR imaging sequence be performed through the abdomen to allow evaluation of the retroperitoneal nodal stations and visualization of the lumbar skeleton and kidneys. Machine time constraints do not usually permit full MR imaging of the liver, and small volume omental and mesenteric disease may not be identified without increased patient scan time and the use of intravenous contrast media. Moreover, the lungs are suboptimally assessed by MR imaging. Therefore, it is often necessary to image the thorax and abdomen using CT to provide as accurate an imaging tumor stage as possible. Additional need for extrapelvic imaging to stage patients will be included in the chapters dealing with individual malignancies. The MR examination should be correlated with clinical, biochemical, surgical, and pathological findings to improve image interpretation and provide the patient with as accurate a tumor stage as possible.
TUMOR STAGING SYSTEMS Tumor staging systems are internationally agreed graduated classifications of tumor spread. All the tumor staging systems incorporate common principles: l
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TUMOR STAGING Tumor staging requires the accurate identification of local tumor spread and the detection of lymph node or systemic metastases. It can be estimated from the patient’s symptoms, clinical examination findings, and the level of biochemical tumor markers. The histological type and grade of the tumor also correlate with the propensity for extraorgan spread and the early development of metastases.
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There is a gradation from “early” confined tumors, which are given low numbers in the classification systems, to “late” more widespread tumors, which are given higher numbers. The presence and number or size of lymph node metastases are treated similarly. Visceral and bone metastases are grouped in a general metastasis category but are not quantified. Each primary tumor has an individual staging classification tailored to its pattern of spread. The difference between tumor extent for each step is clearly demarcated. The systems must be easily and consistently applicable, forming a shorthand summary of the tumor extent which is understood within the national and international cancer community. The precise information supplied must be of relevance to therapeutic decision making.
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MRI MANUAL OF PELVIC CANCER
The staging systems are an indicator of likely prognosis since each step within the system correlates with a worse prognosis.
In oncology practice, additional benefits accrue from cancer staging systems: l
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The efficacy of new treatments can be assessed in similarly staged, and therefore standardized, populations. The performance of cancer centers can be compared nationally and internationally. The exchange of information is facilitated between different cancer organizations.
The most commonly used staging system is the Tumor Node Metastasis (TNM) classification, which has common stratification groups for each tumor type. The TNM cancer staging classifications are reviewed regularly by the International Union against Cancer (Union Internationale Contre le Cancer, UICC) with contributions from associated national and international organizations. The American classification is the “AJCC Cancer Staging Manual” produced by the American Joint Committee on Cancer and it correlates exactly with the TNM classification. For gynecological malignancy, there is also the Federation Internationale Gyne´cologie et Obste´trique (FIGO) classification and for bladder cancer there is the Jewitt– Strong–Marshall classification, which is principally used in the United States. Colorectal cancer may be staged using the Dukes’ classification, principally in the United Kingdom.
STAGE MIGRATION (STAGE SHIFT) Two factors contribute to the phenomenon of stage migration. The first is the periodic amendments all cancer staging systems undergo, which may lead to tumors being up- or downstaged in the new system. The second is the impact of cross-sectional imaging, which generally upstages more tumors than it downstages when compared to clinical staging. This results in fewer patients categorized as having early stage disease and more patients categorized as having later stage disease, with an overall apparent improvement in survival, stage for stage, compared with nonimaged patients. This is because the patients who are radiologically upstaged usually have a smaller volume of disease than those who are clinically categorized as belonging to the same stage. The upstaged patients are likely to improve the overall survival rate for the higher stage group and may also result in better tumor response rates. In addition, the early stage disease group is less confounded by inaccurate clinical staging of patients with more advanced tumors, and so this group too will appear to have improved tumor response rates and survival. The stage migration phenomenon should be remembered when interpreting modern clinical trial results and comparing them to historical controls. In this situation, stage migration may contribute to spurious increased efficacy of the new therapies.
PRINCIPLES OF ONCORADIOLOGICAL PRACTICE IN TUMOR DIAGNOSIS AND STAGING The aims of cancer imaging are to l
select the optimal imaging modality for the tumor to be assessed;
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design imaging protocols that take account of pathways of tumor spread; differentiate between tumor and benign conditions that can mimic tumor; provide the means to obtain histological confirmation of cancer by image-guided biopsy, which should not compromise the chance of cure; allocate a tumor stage on the basis of imaging findings; provide any additional information which will inform clinical decision making, for example, the likelihood of a tumor-free resection margin; maintain a common imaging modality and imaging protocol before and after treatment to allow assessment of response.
Each oncological staging report needs to incorporate standard information including an accurate description of tumor size, local extent, the presence of enlarged lymph nodes together with their location and maximum short-axis diameter, and the presence of any distant metastases. This information should be summarized using an appropriate staging system, which is clearly understood by the clinicians involved in the patient’s care. Where there is uncertainty about the exact stage, then this should be recorded, for example, “the MR stage of this patient’s prostate tumor is either T2b N0 M0 or T3a N0 M0.” If the staging assessment incorporates information obtained from clinical or pathological examination, this should be noted. It is also necessary to identify important normal structures, for example unobstructed kidneys, and to mention any comorbid conditions that may have an implication for patient treatment such as severe diverticular disease in a patient who may require pelvic radiotherapy.
FUNCTIONAL MR IMAGING Functional MR imaging enables information about tumor physiological parameters such as vascularity, oxygenation, metabolism, and diffusion to be quantified. The results are used to guide treatment decisions and identify treatment response, particularly with newer therapeutic agents which may be effective without altering tumor size. MRI can provide similar tumor-specific information to PET CT and may be preferable since it is readily available and does not require manufacture and administration of radiopharmaceuticals. Where published research supports the use of functional MR imaging in a particular pelvic cancer, then information will be included in the relevant chapter.
FURTHER READING Edge SB, Byrd DR, Compton CC, et al. AJCC Cancer Staging Manual. 7th ed. New York: Springer, 2010. International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics. Staging Announcement. FIGO staging of gynaecologic cancers; cervix and vulva. Int J Gynecol Obstet 1995; 5:319. Payne GS, Schmidt M, Morgan VA, et al. Evaluation of magnetic resonance diffusion and spectroscopy measurements as predictive biomarkers in stage 1 cervical cancer. Gynecol Oncol 2010; 116: 246–252. Wittekind C, Greene FL, Hutter RVP, et al. TNM Atlas Illustrated Guide to the TNM/pTNM Classification of Malignant Tumours. 5th ed. (2nd printing, corrected 2007). Berlin, Heidelberg, New York: Springer-Verlag, 2005. Zahra MA, Hollingsworth KG, Sala E, et al. Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI as a predictor of tumour response to radiotherapy. Lancet Oncol 2007; 8:63–74.
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2 MR imaging techniques in pelvic cancer Andrew P. Jones, Rohit Kochhar, and Alison Kilburn
MR IMAGING EQUIPMENT Superconducting 1.5-T MR scanners have now become the standard for clinical imaging. While there are options for lower-field open systems and a growing trend toward widerbore, shorter-length superconducting magnets, the horizontal bore 1.5-T magnet with the latest multiple-receiver technology generally provides the optimal specification for pelvic MR imaging in oncology. Higher-field 3-T imaging is emerging as a platform for research and, although some technical barriers still remain, these machines may become the systems of choice for MR body imaging. Three-Tesla systems offer higher signal-tonoise and contrast-to-noise ratios resulting in shorter-image acquisition times or improved resolution for some pelvic applications. Changes in T1 and T2 relaxation times, increased sensitivity to magnetic susceptibility, and radio frequency (RF) energy deposition have required the implementation of sequence and hardware adaptations to realize the full benefits of 3-T imaging. Also, within the abdomen and pelvis, RF field inhomogeneity resulting from dielectric effects within tissues has been a problem when using larger fields of view and can lead to standing wave effects and large local variations in signal intensity. The most recent application of parallel transmission techniques or multitransmit coil designs have addressed these problems with significant improvements in image quality for body imaging at 3 T. Many issues surrounding MR device compatibility and safety have yet to be fully addressed at 3 T mainly due to a lack of information and testing data for many devices. In comparison to a 1.5-T system, 3-T systems are more expensive to buy and operate, which has prevented widespread uptake in the clinical setting. Recent technical advances in equipment have resulted in a stabilized magnetic field gradient specification, an escalation in the number of independent receive channels and an improved range of multielement receiver coils. Standard magnetic field gradient performance with maximum amplitudes of approximately 30 mT/m and slew rates of 125 T/m/sec provide satisfactory imaging performance for pelvic imaging where very small field of views (FOVs) are not required and appropriate b-values for diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) can easily be achieved. Higher-level gradients of maximum amplitudes of approximately 45 mT/m and slew rates of 250 T/m/ sec can provide advantages for better optimized echo times and echo train lengths. The latest receiver technology utilizing multiple receive channels and multielement receiver coils provides significant benefits for pelvic imaging, which requires maximum signal-to-noise ratio for large FOVs. Systems using 16- to 18-channel receivers offer performance that matches the requirements of the majority of multielement body coils used in pelvic imaging and allow the use of parallel imaging techni-
ques. Increased receiver channels of 32 and greater may establish a role for combined pelvic and abdominal imaging or emerging whole body applications. Modern MR systems conventionally have multielement body coils for imaging the pelvis. An array or matrix of coil elements positioned anteriorly are matched with a paired matrix positioned posteriorly or with the matrix of coils in the spine coil. Endorectal coils can provide an increase in signal-to-noise ratio for small FOV applications, for instance in prostate imaging, but physical tissue distortion of the wall of the rectum and signal flaring directly adjacent to the coil can impact on image interpretation.
MR IMAGING PROTOCOLS Patient Preparation and Care The interaction between the patient and the radiographic/ technological staff is essential in ensuring a successful examination. Most patients with cancer will be motivated to cooperate but could have difficulty complying due to pain, claustrophobia, or psychological stress. With careful explanation and sympathetic handling, patients are often able to cooperate fully. Time spent in making them as comfortable as possible before the examination, assisting them during the examination, and praising their efforts afterwards may ensure that the current examination is satisfactory and, importantly, that the patient is happy to undergo follow-up MR examinations. For all pelvic cancers, a standardized imaging protocol should be agreed so as to l
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l l
ensure that imaging covers all the potential regions of tumor spread within the pelvis; keep scan times to the minimum necessary for patient comfort and efficient use of the MR equipment; allow comprehensive interpretation of the examination; ensure reproducibility of subsequent MRI examinations.
The administration of Buscopan1 (hyoscine-N-butylbromide) to reduce bowel peristalsis can provide significant benefits in some pelvic imaging applications where involuntary bowel motion degrades image quality. Accepted practice involves the use of orthogonal plane T1-weighted (T1W) and T2-weighted (T2W) sequences with off-axis planes or additional sequences being used for welldefined indications.
T1W Sequences (Spin Echo or Gradient Echo) T1W sequences give an overview of the abdomen and pelvis for detection of lymph node enlargement, bone marrow metastases, and hydronephrosis and hydroureter (Fig. 2.1). They allow
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evaluation of tumor bulk, extension into pelvic fat, and provide some tissue-specific information, for example, the presence of hemorrhage and water. They are most commonly performed in the coronal and transaxial planes (Figs. 2.2–2.7).
T2W Sequences (Fast or Turbo Spin Echo) T2W sequences demonstrate the zonal anatomy of the pelvic viscera and nearly always clearly identify the primary tumor and its local extent. They are usually performed in three orthogonal planes.
Chemical Fat Saturation Chemical- or frequency-selective fat saturation techniques rely on the difference in resonant frequencies of water and fat and their resultant chemical shift of 3.5 ppm (220 Hz at 1.5 T). A saturation pulse centered only over the frequency for fat can selectively remove the signal contribution of fat from the image (Fat Sat and SPIR). The fat saturation pulse is normally delivered for each repetition period (TR) which leads to an increased TR and longer acquisition times. The impact of fat saturation varies with sequence type. Nonuniformity of the RF pulse may cause incomplete fat suppression, but this can be improved by SPAIR sequence, particularly in difficult body regions where there are tissue/air/bone boundaries. The sequence requires extended TEs, so is usually employed in T2-weighted fat suppression. The chemical shift between water and fat can also be exploited by using a frequency-selective excitation pulse at the water frequency (water excitation), resulting in the selective excitation of only water with no contribution from fat in the resulting images. In general, fat saturation techniques can be applied to both T1W and T2W sequences (Fig. 2.8). They are useful to delineate primary tumor extension into fat and to distinguish fat within lesions (e.g., ovarian masses).
Imaging Protocols for Specific Cancer Types DWI and dynamic contrast-enhanced imaging (DCE) are increasingly being applied to a variety of imaging protocols within the pelvis. However, because these techniques are relatively new in terms of routine application, they have not been included in the basic imaging protocol descriptions given below. These techniques are discussed in more detail later in this chapter. All the following examination protocols will require the T1W overview sequences detailed in Table 2.1 plus the T2W/ other sequences specified in Table 2.2.
ARTIFACTS AND STRATEGIES FOR REDUCTION The main artifacts encountered in MR pelvic imaging are motion and flow related. Motion within the pelvis can arise from respiratory movement, although in most patients this is minimal. Bowel peristalsis produces the more significant artifact of ghosting, which is blurring propagated in the phase encoding direction. Pulsatile flow artifacts arising from arterial blood are most noticeable on STIR sequences and postcontrast T1W images where the dominant high-signal structure on the image is blood. Chemical shift artifacts, arising from the differing resonant frequencies of water and fat, historically caused problems
in pelvic imaging. Currently, utilization of higher receiver bandwidths to achieve rapid signal sampling means that chemical shift artifacts are negligible. Standard techniques such as the application of saturation bands, choice of phase encoding direction, and the use of multiple signal averages can reduce the impact of artifacts from respiratory motion and blood flow. Parallel imaging techniques allow change of phase encoding direction and include phase oversampling to avoid aliasing with no increase of scan time. Similarly, where signal-to-noise ratio is sufficient, the use of parallel imaging factors of 2 and greater enable multiple signal averages to be included to reduce the impact of flow and respiratory motion with only limited impact on scan times. Potential problems with motion artifacts in non-breath-hold techniques can be minimized using free-breathing approaches. These new data acquisition strategies are generally either continuous, with retrospective selection and reordering of phase-encoding steps, or prospective using navigator echo techniques to selectively gate the acquisition according to respiratory motion. Nearly all such acquisition techniques, which involve the selective acquisition of data, require an increase in scan time. They are most applicable to imaging the upper abdomen and are not usually required for pelvic MR imaging. Techniques originally designed for head imaging such as BLADE and PROPELLER have now been very successfully used throughout the body to allow compensation for some motion artifacts. They use an incremented set of radial segments of k-space lines, which produce data filling within k-space with overlapping spokes of a wheel. The effective repeat sampling of the central region of k-space where the “blades” or “propellers” overlap results in a reduction of the effects of primarily in-plane motion. Overall acquisition times can be slightly greater, but good-quality T2W or proton density images are often obtained in uncooperative or difficult patients. As with all MR imaging, effective preparation of the patient and good positioning, so that he or she is comfortable and relaxed, reduce the likelihood of generalized patient movement.
CONTRAST ENHANCEMENT TECHNIQUES Intravenous injection of a gadolinium-based contrast agent is not routinely employed in pelvic imaging for malignancy. This is largely due to l
l
the inherent contrast differences between tumors and pelvic organs and tissues on T2W images; the enhancement of both tumors and normal pelvic organs, which can decrease tumor conspicuity.
However, a contrast agent injection may be valuable in certain instances: 1.
2.
Nondynamic injection l To clarify the composition of complex ovarian tumors l To determine the extent of sarcoma spread l To delineate the extent of disease or treatment effect within muscle groups l To predict or identify response to treatment Dynamic injection of a contrast bolus l To identify the tumor site in prostate cancer l To assess the depth of myometrial and bladder wall involvement in patients with endometrial or bladder cancer
2
0
0
2
0
TR 3.5 TE 1.32 258
2
0
TR 4100 TE 82 TR 4300 TE 88 TR 5.98 TE 2.76 108
2
Not used routinely
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TR 5000 TE 102 908, 1508
Not used routinely
Not used routinely
17
17
2
0
2
7
2
None
0
1
Parallel imaging factor
TSE factor (ETL)
TR 5030 TE 102 908, 1508
TR 20 TE 5 408 TR 669 TE20 908, 1508 TR 400 TE 12 908, 1808 TR 208 TE 476 708, 1808 TR 5390 TE 102 908, 1508
Typical TE (ms), TR (ms), Flip angle
1
1
5
4
2
2
3
1
1
6
1
Signal averages
5
2.5
6
6
3
3
3
5.5
5
6
10
Slice thickness (mm)
R-L
A-P
A-P
A-P
R-L
R-L
A-P
A-P
R-L
R-L
A-P
Phase encoding direction
56
8
0
0
100%
100%
20%
0%
25%
30%
0%
Phase oversampling (%)
Abbreviations: ETL, echo train length; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging. VIBE, volume interpolated breath-hold examination.
T2W Transaxial (oblique for cervix and rectum) T2W Coronal (oblique for prostate) DWI Transaxial DWI Transaxial T1 3D Gradient echo (VIBE or equivalent) Sagittal T1 3D Gradient echo (VIBE or equivalent) Transaxial
T1W Transaxial Pelvis T1W Transaxial Abdomen T2W Sagittal
T1W 3 planes (scout) T1W Coronal
Sequence Weighting Plane
Table 2.1 Basic Imaging Parameters for Staging Pelvic Cancers Matrix size (phase frequency) 128 256 256 512 256 512 109 256 210 256
210 256
210 256
156 192 156 192 146 256
101 192
Field of view, frequency (cm) phase (%) 49 100% 49 100% 38.3 100% 38 68.8% 20 100%
20 100%
20 100%
38 81.3% 38 81.3% 38 81.3%
32 75%
Temporal resolution 3 sec 100 measurements
Temporal resolution 30 sec 5 measurements
b-values = 0(50), 100, 300, 600 b-value = 1000
Fat Sat used occasionally
1 presaturation band to cover anterior abdominal wall Parallel presaturation band superior to slice block Inferior and superior presaturation bands parallel to slice block Presaturation band positioned over anterior pelvic wall fat and superior to slice block Inferior and superior presaturation bands parallel to slice block
To plan subsequent slice positions
Comments
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Table 2.2 Examination Protocols for Pelvic Cancers Examination protocol Vulva
Vagina Endometrium
Sequences
Comment
T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W
T2W sequences in all three orthogonal planes
sagittal transaxial coronal sagittal transaxial sagittal transaxial
Cervix uteri
T2W sagittal T2W transaxial
Ovary
T2W transaxial
Prostate
Bladder
Rectum
Sigmoid colon
Pelvic floor, urethra, and anus Penis
T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W
coronal sagittal sagittal transaxial coronal sagittal
T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W T2W
transaxial coronal sagittal transaxial coronal transaxial sagittal coronal sagittal transaxial coronal sagittal
T2W coronal
Bone metastases Pelvic lymph node metastases Recurrent tumor Pelvic clearance
T2W transaxial STIR coronal T1W transaxial T2W transaxial T2W T2W T2W T2W
sequences sagittal transaxial coronal
Sequence to cover vagina Two blocks to include cervix uteri down to introitus Midline to cover endometrium and vagina. Use to plan transaxial sequences To cover whole of the endometrium. One block perpendicular to the endometrium and a second block parallel to the endometrium Sequence to include corpus uteri down to introitus One block positioned over cervix uteri and angled 908 to the endocervical canal, the second block positioned over the cervix uteri and variably angled perpendicular to the plane that needs to be assessed, e.g., posterior bladder/anterior rectum One or two blocks to include all of disease. May need to increase slice thickness up to 6 mm to include the whole area of interest May need to increase slice thickness to encompass whole of disease May be useful in some circumstances To include seminal vesicles to apex of prostate from perineum up Oblique sequence to include seminal vesicles, position parallel to prostatic urethra T2W sequences in all three orthogonal planes to cover whole bladder. May need to increase slice thickness up to 6 mm depending on distension of the bladder From perineum up to include whole bladder Start with sagittal sequence to enable planning further T2W sequences Transaxial oblique positioned perpendicular to the lesion and coronal blocks positioned on the sagittal images to include rectum Start with transaxial sequence to enable planning further T2W sequences Sagittal and coronal blocks positioned on the transaxial images T2W sequences in all three orthogonal planes positioned to include disease, ensure FOV is positioned low when scanning the anus Midline to include penis and sacrum. May need a larger FOV for coverage. No anterior saturation band To cover front of penis anteriorly and back of bladder posteriorly. May need to increase slice thickness for coverage One or two blocks to cover penis and scrotum inferiorly to above the bladder To cover from iliac crests to below symphysis pubis One or two overlapping blocks to cover from bifurcation of the aorta to below symphysis pubis Follow site-specific T2W sequences as suggested T2W sequences in all three orthogonal planes to include pelvic side walls, and from sacral promontory down to symphysis pubis
T1W (three-plane) scout sequence and T1W coronal and T1W transaxial are performed for all protocols in addition to the specific sequences listed. Abbreviation: FOV, field of view.
l
l
To obtain physiological information about tumor perfusion, oxygenation, and angiogenesis To differentiate tumor from inflammation or posttreatment fibrosis in bladder cancer
Dynamic Contrast Enhancement Dynamic postcontrast imaging is usually achieved using specialized 3D sequences. These 3D volume fat saturated gradient echo sequences use short TEs and TRs, along with k-space
interpolation techniques, to minimize acquisition times. Such rapid 3D volume acquisition times enable multiple volume acquisitions during the arterial, venous, and delayed phases of contrast circulation. Dynamic contrast enhancement (DCE) techniques can be used to assess tumor perfusion, oxygenation, and angiogenesis, employing modifications of methods first developed in cerebral studies usually based on dynamic T1 contrast enhancement. Signal enhancement curves obtained are mathematically fitted using a variety of pharmacokinetic models, and promising
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results have been published, for example, in the study of carcinoma of the cervix and carcinoma of the prostate. Figure 2.9A–E shows data for DCE analysis of posttreatment bladder cancer. The signal-intensity time curves from areas of residual tumor and fibrosis are shown to be quite different. Areas of residual tumor demonstrate a rapid increase in signal intensity (Fig. 2.9E) due to the increased permeability (leakiness) of tumor capillaries compared to areas of fibrosis that demonstrate intermediate signal increase.
NEW EMERGING TECHNIQUES Diffusion-Weighted Imaging DWI is an established technique for body imaging. Improvements in magnetic field homogeneity and sequence optimization using automated phase maps to optimize the magnetic field homogeneity over the imaging volume have resulted in good-quality DWI techniques. Faster imaging sequences, generally using echo planar imaging (EPI) signal readout, permit the use of multiple signal averages (typically 6–10) in combination with parallel imaging to reduce motion effects and permit acquisitions times of two to three minutes. The use of parallel imaging techniques reduces the echo train length of the DWI sequence EPI readout and hence the effective TE, producing a decreased sensitivity to magnetic field inhomogeneities, which can greatly affect image quality within the pelvis. DWI still remains very sensitive to susceptibility effects that arise from metallic objects or biomedical implants within or close to the imaging volume, as well as hemorrhage where there is a breakdown of blood products containing iron. Both cause signal voids and distortion within the DWI images. In some circumstances, it may be possible to alter image slice positions or orientation to minimize the impact of this susceptibility artifact. DWI produces an image contrast that results from inherent differences in the restriction of movement of water molecules. Pelvic cancers have been shown to have significantly lower apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values compared with normal tissue, with ADC values showing promise as a biomarker for treatment response. In general, DWI is helpful in staging known malignancies, differentiating benign from malignant lesions, and assessing treatment response or identifying disease recurrence (Fig. 2.10). In clinical practice, DWI normally acquires images at three or more different b-values to allow calculation of the ADC. These b-values always include one or more low b-values (0 or 50 sec/mm2) and a high-b-value (usually about 600–1000 sec/mm2). The choice of the b-values influences both the image appearance of lesions with restricted diffusion on the DWIs and
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the accuracy of the calculated ADC values and ADC maps. Unfortunately, there is no absolute value of ADC which can be used to identify cancer in the pelvis, as several normal tissues such as lymph nodes, endometrium, and bowel, along with fibrosis, can have low ADC values. DWI data sets can be combined and fused with conventional MR images to correlate information. High-b-value images showing tumors of high cellularity as high signal can be fused with T2W images to improve the visualization of the depth of tumor invasion, for example, providing enhanced detail compared to T2W images alone. 1
H MR Spectroscopy
Multivoxel 1H spectroscopy or chemical shift imaging (CSI) has been applied to the brain for some time. However, CSI techniques have more recently been used for examination of prostate cancer (Fig. 2.11). 1H spectra show changes in creatine (Cr) and choline (Cho) signals in the presence of tumor and a metabolite signal from citrate (Ci), which is present only in normal healthy tissue. In prostate cancer, spectral changes have been reported as being present, despite normal imaging appearances. The spectroscopy provides important information on disease spread in the peripheral zone and in the neurovascular bundle and can be used to guide biopsies, monitor response to treatment, and for the assessment of possible recurrence. Recently, reductions in CSI voxel size have improved the resolution of the CSI data, although best results are reported for endocavity coils rather than pelvic-phased array coils. A number of studies have produced numerical data for [Cho + Cr]/[Ci] ratios in malignancy versus normal tissue or in benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). However, a number of problems still exist with this approach because citrate is a strongly coupled resonance and the spectral shape of this resonance depends on magnetic field strength and pulse sequence timing. Therefore, variations are seen in quantification of the citrate peak between different MR systems. The use of ratios for the metabolites also seems to be more robust in the peripheral zone because of regional variations of citrate within normal prostate. It is now widely recognized that polyamine (PA) resonances, predominantly from spermine, feature in prostate MRS and appear between choline and creatine. Hence, numbers that are quoted as [Cho + Cr]/[Ci] are actually [Cho + PA + Ci]/[Cr]. There is also evidence that polyamine is reduced in malignancy so that at the very least this may be a confounding factor in many earlier published studies. It is important to appreciate that all the other imaging techniques, including DWI, will in the future contribute to the complete examination.
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Figure 2.1 Coronal T1WI of the abdomen and pelvis demonstrating lymph node metastases (arrows).
Figure 2.3 (A) Transaxial T2WI with phase encoding direction anterior to posterior with ghosting artifact (arrows). (B) Transaxial T2WI with phase encoding direction left to right showing greatly reduced ghosting artifact.
Figure 2.2 Transaxial T1WI of the pelvis showing the corpus uteri (intermediate signal intensity, straight arrow) and low signal intensity adnexal cysts (curved arrows).
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Figure 2.4 (A) Sagittal T2WI of the female pelvis showing image degradation as a result of peristalsis (arrows). (B) Sagittal T2WI of the female pelvis post administration of an antispasmodic agent. The cervical tumor and its relationship with the bladder wall (straight arrow) and rectum (curved arrow) are more clearly visualized.
Figure 2.5 (A) Sagittal T2WI of the female pelvis showing the plane of transaxial oblique slices perpendicular to the endocervical canal (white line). (B) Transaxial oblique T2WI of the female pelvis along the plane illustrated in A. The intact fat plane between the cervix uteri and the bladder is clearly visualized (arrows).
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Figure 2.6 (A) Sagittal T2WI showing the plane of transaxial oblique slices parallel to the endocervical canal (white line). (B) Transaxial oblique T2WI of the female pelvis along the plane illustrated in A, showing infiltration of cervical tumor into the rectal wall (arrows).
Figure 2.7 (A) Sagittal T2WI showing the plane of coronal oblique slices through the prostate (white line) and the reduced signal from fat in the abdominopelvic wall due to positioning of a presaturation band (arrows). (B) Coronal oblique T2WI of the male pelvis along the plane illustrated in A, showing disease extending into the bladder from the base of the prostate (arrows).
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Figure 2.8 Example of a small field of view transaxial T2W of the male pelvis with fat saturation. Note the loss of signal from fat (arrows) which allows clear visualization of the prostate (curved arrow) and abnormal low signal in the peripheral zone posteriorly (arrowheads) consistent with prostatic cancer.
Figure 2.9 Example images and data from a DCE (dynamic contrast enhanced) MR obtained post treatment for two patients with bladder carcinoma for the assessment of residual tumor and treatment response. Thickening in the bladder wall is seen in both patients on transaxial T2W TSE images. The patient shown in A (T2W) and B (dynamic) was found to have residual tumor post treatment (arrowed). The patient shown in C (T2W) and D (dynamic) was found to have evidence of fibrosis post treatment (arrowed). Graphs in E illustrate an example of DCE concentration-time curves obtained from ROIs defined in residual tumor (triangles), posttreatment fibrosis (circles), and normal bladder wall (crosses) for the two patients. The signal-intensity time curves from areas found to be residual tumor and fibrosis are shown to be quite different. Areas of residual tumor demonstrate a rapid increase in signal intensity due to the increased permeability (leakiness) of tumor capillaries compared to areas of fibrosis which demonstrate intermediate signal increase. (Continued)
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Figure 2.9 (Continued)
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Figure 2.10 Fifty-eight-year-old female with rectal carcinoma planned for radical pelvic surgery post radiochemotherapy. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI images demonstrating a large lobulated recurrent mass (T) involving the upper and mid rectum (arrows in A). The mass infiltrates the mesorectum and abuts the left levator ani (arrowheads in B). In addition there is possible anterior extension to infiltrate the cervix (curved arrow in B); however, it is difficult to differentiate how much of this is due to post-treatment inflammatory change as opposed to disease. Diffusion-weighted imaging performed using (C) b100, (D) b600, and (E) b1000 demonstrate progressively increasing high signal in the rectal tumor mass (T) and in the nodular anterior extension infiltrating the cervix with corresponding low signal on the ADC map (F) in keeping with restricted diffusion confirming locally infiltrative tumor (curved arrows in C–F). (Continued)
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Figure 2.10 (Continued)
Figure 2.11 1H spectroscopic chemical shift imaging of the prostate. The position of the voxels is shown in the left image and the measured spectrum for each voxel is demonstrated on the right. Citrate occurs only within normal healthy tissue. Areas of malignant tissue are characterized by a decrease in citrate signal and an increase in the choline signal.
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FURTHER READING Brown MA, Martin DR, Semelka RC. Future directions in MR imaging of the female pelvis. Magn Reson Imaging Clin N Am 2006; 14 (4):431–437. A review of probable future applications for MR of the female pelvis. Chang KJ, Kamel IR, Macura KJ, et al. 3.0-T MR imaging of the abdomen: comparison with 1.5 T. Radiographics 2008; 28:1983– 1998. Paper discussing and comparing MR applications in the abdomen at 1.5-T and 3-T magnetic field strengths. Elster AD, Burdette JH. Questions and Answers in Magnetic Resonance Imaging. 2nd ed. St Louis, Missouri: Mosby, 2001. Thorough but easy to read physics text providing practical answers on specific topics of benefit to all involved in MRI. Husband J, Reznek RJ. Imaging in Oncology (2 volume set). 3rd ed. London, UK: Informa Healthcare, 2010. A very comprehensive and detailed clinical text book which is an excellent source of reference for clinical imaging in oncology. Johnson W, Taylor MB, Carrington MB, et al. The value of hyoscine butylbromide in pelvic MRI. Clin Radiol 2007; 11(62):1087–1093. Paper describing the benefits and practical regimen for using Buscopan in specific routine pelvic MR imaging applications. Lomas DJ. Review: optimization of sequences for MRI of the abdomen and pelvis. Clin Radiol 1997; 52(6):412–428. Physics based review of
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MR sequences and artifacts encountered in abdomen and pelvic MR imaging. Loncaster JA, Carrington BM, Sykes JR, et al. Prediction of radiotherapy outcome using dynamic contrast enhanced magnetic resonance imaging of carcinoma of the cervix. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 2002; 54(3):759–767. Paper describing method and correlation between clinical outcome and dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI. McRobbie DW, Moore EA, Graves MJ, et al. MRI from Picture to Proton. 2nd ed. UK: Cambridge University Press, 2007. Excellent comprehensive MR physics text book that allows the reader to learn about MR at both a practical level and at a more detailed physics level. O’Connor JP, Jackson A, Parker GJ, et al. DCE-MRI biomarkers in the clinical evaluation of antiangiogenic and vascular disrupting agents. Br J Cancer 2007; 96:189–195. Paper describing the potential role of dynamic contrast-enhanced MR techniques. Shukla-Dave A, Hedvig H, Moskovitz C, et al. Detection of prostate cancer with MR spectroscopic imaging: an expanded paradigm incorporating polyamines. Radiology 2007; 245(2):499–506. Paper assessing the usefulness of 1H MR spectroscopy in prostate cancer. Whittaker CS, Coady A, Culver L, et al. Diffusion-weighted MR imaging of female pelvic tumours: a pictorial review. Radiographics 2009; 29:759–778. Pictorial review of DWI in pelvic oncology.
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3 Anatomy of the pelvis James O’Connor and Paul A. Hulse
MUSCULOSKELETAL MORPHOLOGY The pelvic cavity is divided into the false (greater) pelvis above and the true (lesser) pelvis below by an imaginary plane passing from the sacral promontory posteriorly around the arcuate lines laterally and anteriorly onto the symphysis pubis. The true pelvis is a bowl-shaped structure that contains and protects the lower portions of the urinary and intestinal tracts, and the internal reproductive organs. The bony pelvis forms an articulated ring consisting of the paired hip bones (composed of the fused iliac, ischial, and pubic bones), the sacrum, and the coccyx. The pelvic sidewalls are composed of a horseshoe-shaped muscular sling covered with pelvic fascia. The iliopsoas muscles form the walls of the false pelvis, while the obturator internus and piriformis muscles form the walls of the true pelvis. The pelvic floor is a fibromuscular diaphragm formed from the paired levator ani muscles anteriorly and the paired coccygeal muscles posteriorly. The levator ani muscle arises from the superior and posterior aspects of the pubis, the pelvic fascia covering the obturator internus muscle and the inner surface of the ischial bone and ischial spine. It inserts into the perineal body, coccyx, and the anococcygeal body. The levator ani is divided into three groups of muscles. The anterior group (levator prostate or sphincter vaginae) forms a sling around the prostate and vagina and inserts into the perineal body. The middle group (puborectalis) forms a sling around the junction of the rectum and anal canal and blends with the external anal sphincter. The posterior group (pubococcygeus and iliococcygeus) inserts into the anococcygeal body. The paired coccygei muscles form the posterior part of the pelvic floor. These arise from the ischial spines and attach to the coccyx posterior to the levator ani muscles. The groups of muscles are not resolved separately on MR imaging. Lying centrally in the pelvic floor is the perineal body, a fibromuscular mass that gives attachment to the anal sphincter, bulbospongiosus, transverse perineal, and levator ani muscles. Lying posteriorly between the anus and coccyx is the anococcygeal body, a fibromuscular mass that gives attachment to levator ani and fibers from the anal sphincter. The pelvic floor divides the pelvic cavity above from the perineum and ischiorectal fossae below.
PELVIC FASCIA, VISCERAL LIGAMENTS, AND PERITONEAL REFLECTIONS The pelvis has a two-layered covering of fascia. The parietal fascia covers the walls and floor and is continuous superiorly with the iliacus and transversalis fascia. It is thickened over the obturator internus and is more conspicuous on MR imaging. The visceral fascia covers the bladder, uterus, and rectum. Fascial condensations form a bilateral band running from
pubis to sacrum. These form supporting ligaments around the urethra and at the bases of the prostate, bladder, rectum, and uterus, attaching each respective organ to the pelvic wall. The urethropelvic and parapelvic ligaments support the urethra. The pubovesical and puboprostatic ligaments support the bladder and prostate. The posterior ligaments support the rectum. The lateral cervical (cardinal) and pubocervical ligaments support the cervix and uterus. The sacrogenital ligaments pass around the side of the rectum to attach to the prostate in the male and the vagina in the female. A fascial condensation anterior to the sacrum forms the presacral fascia. The uterosacral and sacroprostatic ligaments and presacral fascia are normally demonstrated on MR imaging although the other visceral ligaments are not seen unless pathologically thickened. The pelvic cavity can be divided into intra- and extraperitoneal compartments. The peritoneum forms a sack, which, in the pelvis, is draped over the pelvic organs to form a number of intraperitoneal recesses. The largest is the rectovesical space. Within the male rectovesical space, the opposing layers of peritoneum between the prostate and rectum fuse to form Denonvilliers fascia. In the female, the rectovesical space is divided by the uterus into the small vesicouterine recess anteriorly and the larger rectouterine space (pouch of Douglas) posteriorly. The apposing peritoneal layers between the vagina and rectum fuse to form the rectovaginal septum. The rectovesical space is continuous laterally with the pararectal fossae. The sigmoid colon usually indents the left pararectal fossa so that the left pararectal fossa is smaller than the right. The pararectal fossae are continuous anteriorly with the paravesical and supravesical spaces. The paravesical spaces are indented by the lateral and medial umbilical ligaments formed from the peritoneal coverings of the inferior epigastric vessels and obliterated umbilical arteries, respectively. Lying between the transversalis fascia of the anterior abdominal wall anteriorly and the umbilicovesical fascia posteriorly is the extraperitoneal prevesical space. This is limited inferiorly in the male by the puboprostatic ligament and in the female by the pubovesical ligament. The paravesical connective tissues form the lateral border. It extends superiorly to the level of the umbilicus. It is indented anteriorly in the midline by the median umbilical ligament, which contains the urachus; this runs from the apex of the bladder to the umbilicus. The peritoneal reflection and umbilical ligament are consistently demonstrated on MR imaging.
PELVIC VISCERA Urinary Bladder The urinary bladder is a muscular organ that has a maximum capacity of around 800 mL when distended with urine. It lies
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below the peritoneal reflection and rests on the pelvic floor. It is separated from the pubic bones anteriorly by the retropubic space. The vagina in the female and the seminal vesicles and vasa deferentia in the male lie posteriorly. The bladder is pyramidal in shape when empty with an apex, body, base (fundus), and neck. The apex lies anteriorly and points to the symphysis pubis. The base forms the posterior wall. The body lies between the apex and base and is formed from the inferolateral surfaces. These converge with the base at the bladder neck. When full, the bladder has an ovoid shape with the superior surface rising out of the pelvis and into the lower abdomen. The trigone is a smooth triangular area of internal mucous membrane lying between the ureteric and internal urethral orifices. When fully distended the bladder wall thickness should not exceed 5 mm. MR Appearance On T1WI, the bladder wall has intermediate signal intensity slightly higher than urine in the adjacent lumen. The wall is best demonstrated on T2WI because of contrast between its lowsignal muscle layer, high-signal urine, and high/intermediatesignal perivesical fat. On MR imaging of the bladder wall, the adventitia is variably identified, the deep and superficial muscle layers cannot be consistently distinguished, and the mucosa is only defined clearly when inflamed. Occasionally, the inner mucosal layer can be identified particularly following intravenous gadolinium-diethylenetriamine penta-ecetic acid (DTPA), which results in delayed enhancement of the wall (Fig. 3.6B).
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into a small cul-de-sac, the prostatic utricle. The ejaculatory ducts open onto the orifice of the prostatic utricle. On either side of the urethral crest is the prostatic sinus into which the prostatic ductules open. The membranous urethra is 1.5 cm long and continuous with the prostatic urethra. It is the portion that passes through the external urethral sphincter within the urogenital diaphragm. Consequently, it is the narrowest and least distensible part of the urethra. The spongy urethra is 15.0 to 16.0 cm long and extends from the membranous urethra to the external urethral orifice. It is divided into bulbous and penile portions. The bulbous urethra lies in the bulb of the penis where it is expanded to form the intrabulbar fossa. This contains the orifices of the bulbourethral glands (Cowper’s glands). The penile urethra is dilated within the glans penis to form the navicular fossa. Multiple minute openings of the mucus-secreting urethral glands open along the length of the spongy urethra. MR Appearance The proximal prostatic urethra and the spongy urethra are not usually demonstrated on MR imaging unless a Foley catheter is in situ. On T2WI transaxial images, the membranous urethra appears as a low–signal intensity ring surrounded by high– signal intensity epithelium. The female urethra is 4.0 cm long and passes from the bladder neck to the vaginal vestibule, opening directly anterior to the vaginal orifice and behind the clitoris. It lies anterior to and describes a course parallel to the axis of the vagina. It passes with the vagina through the urogenital diaphragm. The ducts of multiple paraurethral glands open onto the vestibule on each side of the external urethral orifice.
Ureters The ureters are retroperitoneal structures, which enter the pelvis passing over the pelvic brim close to the bifurcation of the common iliac artery. They pass posteroinferiorly onto the lateral pelvic walls anterior to the internal iliac arteries. Subsequently, they curve anteromedially superior to the levator ani to enter the bladder where they describe an oblique course through the bladder wall. In the male, the ureter lies posterolateral to the ductus deferens and enters the bladder just superior to the seminal vesicles. In the female, the ureter passes medial to the origin of the uterine artery (a branch of the anterior division of the internal iliac artery). At the level of the ischial spine, the ureter runs in the broad ligament of the uterus and parametrium lateral to the cervix and just above the lateral fornices of the vagina, where it is crossed superiorly by the uterine artery. MR Appearance The ureters can be identified on high-resolution T1WI and T2WI in the pelvis by the low signal intensity in their thin walls. They are most easily identified on T2WI when they are obstructed in their distal course so that they become distended with high–signal intensity urine.
Urethra The male urethra is divided into four parts. The preprostatic urethra is 1.0 to 1.5 cm long and extends from the neck of the bladder to the superior aspect of the prostate. The prostatic urethra is 3.0 to 4.0 cm long; on its posterior wall it has a median ridge, the urethral crest. In the middle of the crest is the seminal colliculus (verumontanum), which has a slit-like orifice that opens
MR Appearance On T2WI the female urethra appears as four concentric rings of alternating signal intensity. An outer low-signal ring corresponds to the striated muscle layer, a middle high-signal ring corresponds to the smooth muscle layer and submucosa, and the inner two rings correspond to mucosa lined by stratified squamous epithelium and lumen (Figs. 3.7B, 3.9B, and 3.17).
Prostate The prostate is a pyramidal structure approximately 3.0 to 4.5 cm long composed of glandular and fibromuscular tissue. It is enclosed by a 2- to 3-mm band of concentrically orientated fibromuscular stromal tissue, inseparable from the prostate gland that forms a false capsule. This is deficient at the apex allowing a route of extracapsular tumor spread. A fibrous prostatic sheath that is continuous with the puboprostatic ligaments surrounds the capsule. Between the prostatic capsule and sheath is the prostatic venous plexus. The prostate is broader superiorly with a base closely related to bladder neck. Inferiorly, the apex rests on the urogenital diaphragm in contact with fascia of the urethral sphincter and deep perineal muscles. Its anterior surface is separated from the symphysis pubis by loose areolar tissue in the retropubic space, which contains the puboprostatic ligament and part of the prostatic venous plexus. Inferolaterally, the prostate rests on the levator ani muscles. The seminal vesicles and ejaculatory ducts lie posterosuperiorly. Posteriorly, the surface of the prostate is separated from the adjacent rectum by Denonvillier’s fascia. The nonglandular anterior fibromuscular band extends over the anterolateral surface of the prostate. Above the level of the ejaculatory ducts the small
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transitional zone surrounds the urethra. This is covered posterolaterally by the horseshoe-shaped central zone through which the ejaculatory ducts pass. This in turn is surrounded on its posterior, inferior, and lateral surfaces by the peripheral zone. MR Appearance On T1WI, the prostate, seminal vesicles, and periprostatic veins are of uniform intermediate to low signal. On T2WI, the zonal anatomy is clearly demonstrated. The central zone and transitional zone, commonly termed the central gland, have low signal compared to the high–signal intensity peripheral zone. The anterior fibromuscular band has low signal on T1WI and T2WI and is contrasted with the relatively high signal from fat in the retropubic space. The verumontanum is often visualized on T2WI as a high–signal intensity structure. The prostatic capsule is consistently identified as a low–signal intensity structure on T1WI. Following intravenous gadolinium-DTPA, gland enhancement is variable. The periurethral region enhances during the early phase and subsequently the whole gland enhances homogeneously (Figs. 3.8 and 3.26). Zonal anatomy changes with increasing age. The central zone shrinks as the transitional zone enlarges due to benign prostatic hypertrophy. This causes compression of the peripheral zone and creates a low–signal intensity band (surgical pseudocapsule) between it and the hypertrophied transitional zone (Figs. 3.22 and 3.25).
Seminal Vesicles, Vas Deferens, and Ejaculatory Ducts The seminal vesicles are lobulated sacks 5 cm long with a terminal duct positioned inferiorly within the retroperitoneum. They lie obliquely behind the bladder and converge toward the midline. The superior parts of the seminal vesicles lie posterior to the ureters and extend above the level of the peritoneal reflection within the rectovesical space, separated from the rectum by a double layer of peritoneum. The inferior part of each seminal vesicles lies below the peritoneal reflection and is separated from the rectum by Denonvilliers’ fascia. The duct of the seminal vesicle joins the vas deferens to form the ejaculatory ducts. The vas deferens originates in the tail of the epididymis, ascends in the spermatic cord, and passes through the inguinal canal to enter the pelvis crossing the external iliac vessels. It traverses the pelvic sidewall lying external to the peritoneum and then passes medially behind the bladder anterior to and above the ureter and medial to the seminal vesicles where it is dilated to form an ampulla. The paired ejaculatory ducts arise adjacent to the neck of the bladder and run in close proximity passing anteroinferiorly through the prostate where they converge and open onto the prostatic utricles. MR Appearance On T1WI, the seminal vesicles are of intermediate signal intensity similar to muscle contrasted with the high signal intensity present within pelvic fat. On T2WI, the walls appear of low signal intensity and the contents return high signal intensity. A clear fat plane should be present in the angle between the anterior surface of the seminal vesicle and the posterior surface of the bladder (Figs. 3.22–3.24).
Vagina This is a musculomembranous tube, which extends from the vulva posterosuperiorly to surround the cervix of the uterus. It is normally collapsed, with its anterior and posterior walls apposed. It broadens superiorly to form a continuous recess around the cervix divided into the shallow anterior fornix and the deeper posterior and lateral fornices. The anterior wall is approximately 1.5 cm shorter than the posterior wall. The vagina is arbitrarily divided into thirds, the important division being between the upper two-thirds and the lower third, demarcated anteriorly by the junction of the bladder and urethra at the bladder neck. Anteriorly, the vagina is closely related to the base of the bladder and the urethra. Posteriorly, the upper third of the vagina at the level of the vaginal fornices is related to the peritoneal reflection in the pouch of Douglas, the middle third is related to the ampulla of the rectum, and the lower third to the perineal body and anal canal. In postmenopausal women, the vagina shrinks and the cervix is less prominent so that the vaginal fornices are virtually effaced. MR Appearance Layered anatomy of the vagina can be recognized on MR imaging. Mucus secretions within the lumen and the inner mucosal layer maybe seen as low signal on T1WI and high signal on T2WI. The surrounding layers of submucosa, collagen, longitudinal, and circular smooth muscle have low signal on T1WI and T2WI. The surrounding adventitia that contains the vaginal venous plexus appears of high signal intensity on T2WI (Figs. 3.17 and 3.18). Following intravenous gadolinium-DTPA the vaginal muscle wall and submucosa enhance. A central low–signal intensity line, which probably represents the vaginal lumen, is occasionally identified (Figs. 3.6 and 3.7). The vaginal appearances vary with the phase of the menstrual cycle. The wall is thicker in the proliferative phase than the secretory phase. Vaginal secretions are most prominent in the late proliferative and early to mid secretory phase. In the postmenopausal woman, the vaginal wall is thin and of low signal intensity on T1WI and T2WI.
Uterus and Uterine Tubes The uterus is a pear-shaped muscular organ lying centrally in the pelvis between the bladder anteriorly and the rectum posteriorly. It is divided into the fundus, which lies above the level of the uterine tube orifices, the body, and the isthmus, which constricts inferiorly to form the cervix. The cervix is divided into supravaginal and infravaginal parts. The fundus, body, and isthmus of the uterus are predominantly muscular, whereas the cervix is predominantly fibrous in composition. The uterine cavity communicates superolaterally with the uterine (fallopian) tubes and inferiorly with the cervical canal at the internal os. The cervical canal communicates with the vagina via the external os. Anterior and posterior reflections of the peritoneum pass over the uterine tubes to form the broad ligaments. These also enclose the round ligaments of the uterus, the ovarian ligament, and the uterine vessels. The round ligament arises anteroinferiorly to the origin of the uterine tube from the body of the uterus and passes through the inguinal canal to insert into the labia majora. The ovarian ligament arises posteroinferior to the origin of the uterine tubes and passes in the mesovarium to attach to the ovary.
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The uterine tubes extend from the uterine cornua to open into the peritoneal cavity close to the ovaries. They run in the mesosalpinx formed by the free edges of the broad ligament. They have an infundibulum, a funnel-shaped distal end, which extends beyond the broad ligament to overhang the ovary with its fimbriae; an ampulla forming the widest and longest parts of the uterine tube and an isthmus that is continuous with the interstitial portion lying within the uterine wall. MR Appearance On MRI the demarcation between the uterine body and cervix is denoted by a waist in the uterine contour and the entrance of the uterine blood vessels at the level of the internal os. On T1WI, the uterus appears of low to intermediate signal intensity. On T2WI, three separate layers are distinguished—the endometrium, junctional zone, and myometrium. The endometrium lies centrally and appears of high signal. Its thickness varies with the phase of the menstrual cycle, being thinnest after menstruation and thickest during the mid-secretory phase. The outer layer of myometrium is of intermediate signal intensity that increases through the menstrual cycle to a maximum intensity in the mid-secretory phase. Between the endometrium and myometrium is the junctional zone that appears of low signal intensity. Uterine appearances also vary under the influence of oral contraceptives with the myometrium appearing of high signal intensity on T1WI and T2WI. The cervix is of variable composition consisting of an outer zone of smooth muscle, which appears of intermediate signal on T2WI; an inner zone of fibrous stroma, which appears of low signal on T2WI; and a central area of high signal intensity due to epithelium and mucus in the cervical canal (Fig. 3.15). In the shrunken uterus of the postmenopausal woman, the zonal anatomy is not well distinguished, the endometrium is thin, and the myometrium is of lower signal intensity. Following intravenous gadolinium-DTPA zonal anatomy can be displayed on T1WI. The myometrium and endometrium enhance, but the junctional zone remains of low signal intensity. The paracervical tissues (paracolpos) and inner cervical epithelium enhance, but the cervical stroma remains of low signal intensity.
Parametrium The parametrium is the extraperitoneal connective tissue that lies adjacent to the uterine body (parametrium), the cervix (paracervix), and vagina (paracolpos), which together are termed the parametrium clinically. The parametrium is rich in vascular and lymphatic tissue and contains the ureters, which pass lateral to the supravaginal part of the cervix. The floor of the parametrium is formed from the lateral cervical (cardinal) ligaments and divides the paracervical parametria from the paracolpos. The uterovesical ligaments demarcate the lateral margin of the parametrial tissues. MR Appearance The parametrium appears of heterogeneous intermediate signal intensity on T1WI and heterogeneous high signal intensity on T2WI (Fig. 3.16). The parametrial tissues enhance following intravenous gadolinium-DTPA (Fig. 3.6).
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Ovary The ovaries are almond shaped structures usually located in the ovarian fossae close to the lateral pelvic sidewall. Their size varies with age. In the adult, the ovary measures up to 3.0 cm in its longest dimension, but atrophies following the menopause reducing to a dimension of less than 2.0 cm. Considerable variation is seen in their anatomical position. The ovary is attached to the posterior surface of the broad ligament by a double fold of peritoneum, the mesovarium. Further support is given by the ovarian ligament proper and the suspensory ligament of the ovary that is continuous with the broad ligament attaching to the pelvic sidewall and in which the ovarian vessels and lymphatics run. Each adult ovary contains approximately 70,000 follicles. With each menstrual cycle some of these develop into Graafian follicles, one of which matures and releases an ovum at ovulation, leaving the corpus luteum. Therefore, the ovarian cortex contains immature follicles, Graafian follicles, and corpora lutea. MR Appearance The adult ovary appears of intermediate signal intensity on T1WI. On T2WI, the central stroma is of low signal intensity with hyperintense follicles identified in the high–signal intensity peripheral cortex (Fig. 3.16). Following intravenous gadolinium-DTPA, the central ovarian stroma enhances and contrasts with the low-signal ovarian follicles. Sometimes the ovaries can be difficult to locate on MR imaging. If the round ligament is identified and traced posteriorly, the ovaries lie in close proximity to it, attached to it by the ovarian ligament. Peripherally located follicular cysts and surrounding small vessels help to differentiate the ovaries from adjacent bowel. Occasionally, the ovaries are transposed from the pelvis, using the ovarian vessels as a pedicle, to an intraperitoneal paracolic or retrocecal location in order to remove them from a pelvic radiation field. Knowledge of this is important to avoid confusion with metastatic disease.
Rectum The rectum describes an S-shape in the sagittal plane formed by the rectosigmoid junction superiorly and the indentation of the puborectalis muscle of the pelvic floor (the anorectal flexure) inferiorly. In the coronal plane, there are three lateral flexures caused by internal mucosal folds, which overlie thickenings of the circular muscle layer of the rectal wall (valves of Houston). The terminal part of the rectum is dilated to form an ampulla that is supported by the pelvic floor and anococcygeal ligaments. The rectum has no mesentery and is only partially invested by peritoneum. In its upper third, peritoneum covers the anterior and lateral surfaces; in the middle third, only the anterior surface; and in the lower third, there is no peritoneal covering. Above the level of the levator ani and below the peritoneal reflection, a loose layer of connective tissue comprising the perirectal fat, blood vessels, nerves, and lymphatics encloses the rectum. The visceral and parietal layers of perirectal fascia surround this. The rectum and tissues enclosed by the visceral layer of perirectal fascia, also termed the mesorectal fascia, form a distinct anatomical entity, the mesorectum. This is important because radical removal of the rectum is achieved at total mesorectal excision surgery by dissecting along the plane that
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separates the visceral (mesorectal) from the parietal layers of perirectal pelvic fascia. MR Appearance The bowel wall appears of low signal on T1WI and intermediate signal on T2WI. When distended, the wall thickness of the rectosigmoid and anal canal should not exceed 5 mm and 10 mm, respectively. As the bowel wall thickens in the lower rectum, four concentric layers can be discerned. An outside low–signal intensity ring represents the outer muscular layer (muscularis propria), within this a layer of higher signal intensity represents the submucosa; this encloses a layer of low signal intensity corresponding to the muscularis mucosa and lamina propria, and centrally lies a high–signal intensity layer representing the mucosa. On postcontrast T1WI, the submucosal and mucosal layers enhance, but the intervening layer of muscularis mucosa and outer muscular layer do not, permitting differentiation between the layers.
Anal Canal The anal canal begins at the narrowing of the rectal ampulla formed by the indentation of the puborectalis portion of the levator ani and ends at the anal verge, a term that describes the transitional zone between the mucosa of the anal canal and the perianal skin. The upper part of the anal canal is lined with transitional (urothelial type) or rectal glandular mucosa. The lower part of the anal canal is lined with squamous mucosa. The line of demarcation (pectinate line, dentate line) between the two parts lies 2.5 to 3.0 cm proximal to the anal verge and is visible macroscopically but not on MR imaging. It forms a transitional area of squamous and nonsquamous mucosa and indicates the watershed for arterial supply and venous and lymphatic drainage. Above the pectinate line the anal canal is supplied by the superior rectal artery a branch of the inferior mesenteric artery and drained by the superior rectal vein into the portal venous systems. Below the pectinate line, blood supply is from the inferior rectal artery, a branch of the internal iliac artery, and venous drainage is via the inferior rectal veins to the systemic venous system. At the level of the pectinate line, arterial supply and venous drainage passes in both directions via anastomoses formed by the middle rectal arteries and veins. Lymphatic drainage above the level of the pectinate line is to the internal iliac lymph nodes and below the level of the pectinate line to the superficial inguinal lymph nodes. The anal canal has a larger voluntary external sphincter formed from striated muscle, which blends superiorly with the puborectalis muscle. The internal anal sphincter is involuntary and is formed from a thickening of the circular smooth muscle layer, which invests the upper two-thirds of the anal canal. Between the internal and external sphincters lies a continuation of the longitudinal muscle layer of the rectum, which inserts via a fascial extension into the pectinate line. MR Appearance On MRI the upper and lower parts of the anal canal are identified and appear different. The upper part contains the internal anal sphincter, the longitudinal muscle layer, and the puborectalis muscle. The lower part contains the internal anal sphincter, the longitudinal muscle layer, and the external anal sphincter. The longitudinal muscle layer lies in a slit-like space between the internal anal sphincter, the external anal sphincter, and puborectalis muscle—the intersphincteric space.
On T2WI, all the muscles except the internal sphincter, which has intermediate signal intensity, have low signal intensity (Fig. 3.28).
PERINEUM The perineum lies below the pelvic diaphragm. It is a diamondshaped space, which is bounded anterolaterally by the ischiopubic rami, laterally by the ischial tuberosities and posterolaterally by the lower borders of the sacrotuberous ligaments. A line drawn between the ischial tuberosities passes just anterior to the anus and divides the perineum into the urogenital triangle anteriorly and the anal triangle posteriorly.
Urogenital Triangle This compartment contains the urogenital diaphragm, which is a triangular double layer of fascia, which spans the pubic arch and attaches to the ischiopubic rami. The inferior fascial layer of the urogenital diaphragm forms the perineal membrane, which gives attachment to the bulb and crura of the penis or clitoris. It is pierced by the urethra in both sexes and the vagina in the female. Below the urogenital diaphragm lies the superficial perineal pouch. The muscles of the superficial perineal pouch are analogous in both sexes but smaller in the female. In the male, the bulbospongiosus muscles cover the corpus spongiosum, which encloses the urethra, to form the bulb of the penis. The corpus spongiosum extends anteriorly to form the glans penis. The ischiocavernosus muscles arise from the ischial rami to cover the corpora cavernosa and fuse anteriorly together and with the bulb of the penis to form the body of the penis. Thus, the penis is composed of three cylindrical structures: the paired dorsolateral corpora cavernosa and the single, ventral midline corpus spongiosum. Three layers of connective tissue cover the penile corpora. The innermost fibrous tissue layer is the tunica albuginea, surrounding the corpora cavernosa and the corpus spongiosum. The intermediate layer is the deep fascia of the penis (known as Buck’s fascia) which surrounds the corpora cavernosa and separates them from the corpus spongiosum. The outermost layer is a loose layer of subcutaneous connective tissue separated from the overlying skin by the dartos fascia. In the female, the bulbospongiosus muscles cover the vestibular bulbs. The bulbs arise from the perineal membrane, are united anteriorly by a median commissure, and lie each side of the vestibule. The vestibule contains the openings of the vagina, urethra, and ducts of the greater vestibular (Bartholins) glands, which lie at the posterior border of each vestibular bulb. The glans clitoris is a small round tubercle of spongy tissue analogous to the glans penis often covered by a prepuce. Two corpora or crura lie laterally formed by the paired ischiocavernosus muscles. The vulva is the collective term for the external female genitalia that includes the labia majora and minora, clitoris, bulb of the vestibule, vestibule of the vagina, greater and lesser vestibular glands, and the opening of the vagina. The superficial transverse perineal muscle is a slender muscle that runs along the posterior border of the perineal membrane and attaches to the perineal body and ischial rami. Deep to the perineal membrane lies the deep perineal pouch, bounded superiorly by the superior layer of the urogenital diaphragm. This principally consists of the deep transverse perineal
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muscles and the sphincter urethrae. In the male, it contains the bulbourethral (Cowper’s) glands and ducts, and in the female, it is pierced by the vagina.
flow voids, although veins with slow flowing blood may appear as high signal intensity on T2WI.
MR Appearance The three corpora are of intermediate signal on T1WI and high signal on T2WI. The penile bulb normally has higher T2W signal intensity than the corpora cavernosa due to differences in blood flow. Both the tunica albuginea and the Buck’s fascia are depicted on both T1WI and T2WI as a single inseparate hypointense band.
LYMPH NODES
Anal Triangle This contains the anus, anal sphincters, levator ani, and wedgeshaped ischiorectal and ischioanal fossae. The ischiorectal and ischioanal fossae lie between the ischium and rectum and anal canal, respectively. They are bounded superiorly by the posterior fibers of levator ani and inferiorly by the perineal skin. The fossae communicate with each other around the anal canal but are separated by the anococcygeal body, the anal canal, and the perineal body.
ARTERIES The abdominal aorta bifurcates at the L4 level to form the common iliac arteries. These pass inferolaterally to divide at the level of the pelvic brim into the external and internal iliac arteries. They lie anterior to the common iliac veins. The external iliac artery follows the iliopsoas muscle to pass under the inguinal ligament. It gives origin to the deep circumflex iliac and inferior epigastric arteries, which supply the anterior abdominal wall. It lies anterolateral to the external iliac vein. The internal iliac artery supplies the pelvic viscera, buttocks, medial thighs, and perineum. It passes posteromedially into the pelvis dividing into anterior and posterior divisions at the superior edge of the greater sciatic foramen. The anterior division gives rise to the umbilical, obturator, vesical, middle rectal, vaginal, uterine, internal pudendal, and inferior gluteal arteries. The posterior division gives rise to the superior gluteal, iliolumbar, and lateral sacral arteries.
VEINS The venous drainage of the pelvic viscera is mainly via a network of interconnecting veins, which form the pelvic venous plexuses (rectal, vesical, prostatic, uterine, vaginal). These principally drain to the internal iliac veins but also drain via the superior rectal vein to the inferior mesenteric vein and through the lateral sacral veins to the internal vertebral venous plexus. The internal and external iliac veins join to form the common iliac veins, which unite to form the inferior vena cava at the level of the L5 vertebra. The left common iliac vein describes a more horizontal course than the right so that it may appear quite large and elongated on transaxial cross-sectional imaging.
The pelvic lymph nodes are arranged in chains and usually named according to the artery, which they accompany. Unlike the abdominal organs, the pelvic viscera do not possess a hilum. Lymphatic drainage, therefore, occurs along the nodal chains on both sides of the pelvis and not to hilar nodes of each individual organ.
Inguinal Lymph Nodes These lie outside of the pelvis below the inguinal ligament but drain to the external iliac lymph nodes within the pelvis. They are divided into superficial and deep groups. The superficial inguinal nodes receive lymphatic drainage from the lower limb, the anterior abdominal wall below the umbilicus, the gluteal region, the anus and perianal skin, the perianal genitalia, the glans penis, the lower third of the vagina below the hymen, the uterine fundus, and the round ligaments of the uterus. The deep inguinal lymph nodes are located medial to the femoral vein and receive lymphatic drainage from the superficial inguinal nodes, the glans penis, and the clitoris.
External Iliac Nodes These consist of 9 to 10 nodes arranged in three distinct chains surrounding the external iliac artery. They receive lymphatic drainage from the bladder, the membranous urethra, the prostate, the cervix, and the upper part of the vagina. They drain to the common iliac nodes.
Internal Iliac Nodes These receive lymphatic drainage from the rectum, anal canal, bladder, lower ureter, body and cervix of the uterus, upper part of the vagina, seminal vesicles, prostate, and vas deferens. These drain to the common iliac nodes and the surgical obturator nodes.
Obturator Nodes These are divided into proximal (surgical) obturator nodes and the distal (anatomical) obturator nodes. The surgical obturator nodes receive lymphatic drainage from the internal iliac nodes and drain to the external iliac nodes. They are located adjacent to the obturator nerve and vessels proximal to their entry into the obturator canal and are seen posterior to the iliopsoas muscle on transaxial imaging. The anatomical obturator nodes are part of the internal iliac group and lie within the obturator canal itself (see Diagram 3.1).
Sacral Lymph Nodes These are part of the internal iliac group and receive a similar lymphatic drainage. They drain to the lateral aortic lymph nodes. They are located along the medial and lateral sacral vessels.
MR Appearance Blood vessels can be distinguished from lymph nodes on MRI because of their different signal characteristics. Patent vessels usually appear as low signal on spin echo images because of
Common Iliac Lymph Nodes Around four to seven nodes receive lymphatic drainage from the internal and external iliac nodes and drain to the lumbar nodes.
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Diagram 3.1 Schematic representation and T1W images of lower pelvis illustrate the location of pelvic side wall lymph nodes.
Lumbar Nodes These are composed of right and left lateral aortic chains and preaortic and retroaortic chains. The lateral aortic chains receive lymphatic drainage from the legs, pelvic viscera, and lower abdominal wall via the common iliac and sacral nodes. They also receive direct drainage from the ovary and testis. The preaortic nodes receive drainage from the rectum, anal canal, colon, and anterior abdominal wall. The retroaortic nodes receive drainage from the posterior abdominal wall. MR Appearance Lymph nodes appear of intermediate signal intensity on T1WI and variable signal intensity on T2WI, although usually greater than the signal intensity of muscle. In malignant nodes, the fatty hilum is lost and the morphology may appear rounded or have irregular edges, the latter suggesting capsular penetration. Lymph nodes enhance to a variable degree following intravenous gadolinium-DTPA, but this does not help to differentiate malignant from hyperplastic lymph nodes. Pelvic lymph nodes greater than 1.0 cm in short-axis diameter and inguinal nodes greater than 1.5 cm in short-axis diameter are considered enlarged (Table 3.1), although size has also been shown to be
a poor predictor of nodal status. Lymph nodes in the perirectal, paracervical, and presacral spaces are not normally seen, so that their identification on MRI is a good indicator that they are abnormal.
NERVES The pelvis is innervated by the sacral and coccygeal plexi. The sacral plexus lies on the anterior surface of the piriformis muscle just beneath the sacroiliac joint. It gives rise to the sciatic and pudendal nerves. The sciatic nerve leaves the pelvis through the greater sciatic foramen and enters the posterior thigh lateral to the ischial tuberosity. The pudendal nerve also leaves the pelvis through the greater sciatic foramen between the piriformis and coccygeus muscles, hooks around the ischial spine and sacrospinous ligament, and enters the perineum via the lesser sciatic foramen. Passing through the pelvis are the femoral and obturator nerves which originate from the lumbar plexus. The femoral nerve lies in the groove between the iliacus and psoas muscles. The obturator nerve runs along the medial border of the psoas, across the pelvic sidewall, to exit through the obturator foramen.
Table 3.1 Upper Limit of Normal-Sized Pelvic Lymph Nodes Location Inguinal Common iliac Internal iliac Obturator Presacral, paracervical, perirectal
Short-axis diameter (mm) 15 9 7 8 Not normally identified
MR Appearance Nerves appear as low/intermediate signal on T1WI and have a speckled appearance on T2WI, with low signal axons and high signal myelin and other supporting connective tissue. Only the sacral plexus and sciatic and femoral nerves are usually identified on MRI.
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Figure 3.1 Transaxial T1WI at level of L5 vertebra.
Figure 3.3 Transaxial T1WI at level of mid sacrum.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14.
Thecal sac L5 nerve root Cecum Descending colon Urachus Psoas muscle Iliacus muscle Rectus abdominus muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Erector spinae muscle Right common iliac artery Right common iliac vein Left common iliac artery Left common iliac vein L5 vertebral body Iliac blade
Sigmoid colon Small intestine Internal oblique muscle Rectus abdominus muscle Iliopsoas muscle Gluteus minimus muscle Gluteus medius muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Piriformis muscle Inferior epigastric vessels External iliac artery External iliac vein Superior gluteal artery Branches of internal iliac artery and vein
Figure 3.4 Transaxial T1WI at level of acetabular roof. Figure 3.2 Transaxial T1WI at level of S1 vertebra. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13.
Cecum Gluteus minimus muscle Gluteus medius muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Iliopsoas muscle Rectus abdominus muscle External iliac artery External iliac vein Internal iliac artery Internal iliac vein Body of sacrum Sacral ala Ilium
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17.
Uterus (retroverted) Rectum Rectus abdominus muscle Internal oblique muscle Sartorius muscle Iliopsoas muscle Gluteus minimus muscle Gluteus medius muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Piriformis muscle Obturator internus muscle Left ovary Inferior epigastric vessels External iliac vein External iliac artery Deep circumflex iliac vessels Acetabular roof
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Figure 3.5 Transaxial T1WI at level of femoral head. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21.
Urinary bladder Vagina Rectum Obturator externus muscle Iliopsoas muscle Rectus femoris muscle Tensor fascia lata muscle Sartorius muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Piriformis muscle Obturator internus muscle Levator ani muscle Obturator vessels and nerve Common femoral vein Common femoral artery Femoral nerve Deep inguinal lymph node Superior pubic ramus Ischium Head of femur Ischiorectal/anal fossa
Figure 3.6 Transaxial T1WI of female pelvis at level of femoral heads (A) before and (B) after intravenous gadolinium-DTPA. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Bladder Bladder mucosa Vagina Vagina muscle wall Vagina submucosa Vagina-lumen Paracolpos Rectum Obturator internus muscle Blood vessels in paracolpos
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Figure 3.7 Transaxial T1WI of female pelvis at level of symphysis pubis (A) before and (B) after intravenous gadolinium-DTPA. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11.
Urethra Urethra striated muscle layer Urethra-smooth muscle layer and submucosa Urethra-lumen Vagina Vagina muscle wall Vagina-lumen Anal canal Anococcygeal body Levator ani muscle Obturator internus muscle
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Figure 3.8 Transaxial T1WI of male pelvis at level of symphysis pubis (A) before and (B) after intravenous gadolinium-DTPA. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Prostate Prostate—periurethral region Prostate—central and peripheral zone Anal canal Levator ani muscle Obturator internus muscle Anococcygeal raphe Coccyx Natal cleft Symphysis pubis
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Figure 3.9 Transaxial T1WI of male pelvis at level of perineum (A) before and (B) after intravenous gadolinium-DTPA. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Deep dorsal vein of penis Urethra Urethra striated muscle layer Urethra-smooth muscle layer and submucosa Urethra-lumen Perineal body Anal canal Ischioanal fossa Ischial tuberosity Inferior pubic ramus
Figure 3.10 Transaxial T1WI at level of symphysis pubis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16.
Anal canal Ischioanal fossa Pectineus muscle Obturator externus muscle Obturator internus muscle Sartorius muscle Rectus femoris muscle Tensor fascia lata muscle Iliopsoas muscle Vastus lateralis muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Gemellus muscle Body of pubis Neck of femur Greater trochanter of femur Ischial tuberosity
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Figure 3.11 Coronal T1WI of female posterior abdomen and pelvis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16.
Liver Spleen Right kidney Thecal sac Sigmoid colon Retroverted uterus Psoas muscle Quadratus lumborum muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Piriformis muscle Levator ani muscle Inferior gluteal artery and vein Ischioanal fossa Ilium Sacral ala Body of sacrum
Figure 3.12 Coronal T1WI of female mid-abdomen and pelvis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.
Liver Ascending colon Descending colon Uterus Psoas muscle Illiacus muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Obturator internus muscle Obturator externus muscle Adductor brevis muscle Adductor longus muscle Right renal artery Abdominal aorta Left renal artery Right common iliac vein Right common iliac artery Left common iliac artery Iliac blade Acetabulum Head of femur
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Figure 3.13 Coronal T1WI of male mid abdomen and pelvis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22.
Liver Urinary bladder Prostate Transversus abdominus muscle Internal oblique muscle External oblique muscle Psoas muscle Iliacus muscle Gluteus medius muscle Inferior vena cava Right renal artery Left renal artery Abdominal aorta Left renal vein Left testicular artery Left testicular vein Ilium Acetabulum Head of femur Superior pubic ramus Body of pubis Symphysis pubis
Figure 3.14 Coronal T1WI of female anterior abdomen and pelvis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14.
Liver Transverse colon Small intestine Urinary bladder Iliacus muscle Gluteus medius muscle Gluteus minimus muscle Acetabulum Rectus femoris muscle Adductor longus muscle External iliac vessels Ilium Superior pubic ramus Symphysis pubis
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Figure 3.16 Transaxial T2WI of female pelvis at level of acetabular roof. Figure 3.15 Sagittal T2WI of female pelvis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27.
Urinary bladder Urethra Muscular layer of bladder wall Outer myometrium Junctional zone Endometrium Plane of uterocervical junction Cervical lumen Cervical mucosa Cervix (fibromuscular layer) Cervix (outer layer) Ectocervical mucosa Posterior vaginal fornix Nabothian cyst Vaginal lumen containing secretions Vaginal wall (submucosal and muscle layers) Vaginal adventitia and venous plexus Rectovaginal septum Rectum Rectouterine space (pouch of Douglas) containing small volume of fluid Prevesical space Retropubic space Introitus Anal canal Rectus abdominus muscle Pubic bone and symphysis Sacrum
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.
Uterus Parametrium Ovarian follicular cyst Cecum Rectum Perirectal fat Perirectal fascia Peritoneum Round ligament of ovary Rectus abdominus muscle External oblique muscle Iliopsoas muscle Piriformis muscle Gluteus medius muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Internal iliac vessels External iliac vein External iliac artery Sacrum Acetabular roof
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Figure 3.17 Transaxial T2WI of female pelvis at level of symphysis pubis.
Figure 3.18 Transaxial T2WI of female pelvis below symphysis pubis.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17.
Urethra striated muscle layer Urethra-smooth muscle layer and submucosa Urethra-mucosal layer Urethra—lumen Vagina—mucus secretions and inner mucosal layer Vagina—submucosa and smooth muscle layer Vagina—adventitia and venous plexus Pubourethral and periurethral ligaments Rectum Anococcygeal ligament Ischiorectal/anal fossa Levator ani muscle Sartorius muscle Rectus femoris muscle Iliopsoas muscle Pectineus muscle Adductor longus muscle Adductor brevis muscle Obturator externus muscle Obturator internus muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Deep dorsal vein of clitoris Common femoral vessels Symphysis pubis Body of pubis Femur Ischium
Clitoris Corpus cavernosum Urethra Parapelvic ligament Urethropelvic ligament Vagina—mucus secretions and inner mucosal layer Vagina—submucosa and smooth muscle layer Vagina—adventitia and venous plexus Anal canal—internal sphincter Anal canal—external sphincter and longitudinal muscle layer Ischioanal fossa Levator ani muscle—puborectalis portion Sciatic nerve Inferior gluteal vessels Pudendal vessels Inferior pubic ramus Ischium
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Figure 3.19 Coronal T2WI of female mid-pelvis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.
Cervical lumen Cervical mucosa Cervix (fibromuscular layer) Cervix (outer layer) Nabothian cyst Paracervix containing venous plexus Bladder Peritoneum Rectosigmoid junction Posterior wall of vagina and vaginal adventitia Ischioanal fossa Sacral nerve root component of sciatic nerve Gluteus medius muscle Piriformis muscle Obturator internus muscle Levator ani muscle Internal iliac vessels Sacral ala Ilium Ischium
Figure 3.20 Coronal T2WI of female anterior pelvis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17.
Endometrium Uterus—junctional zone Outer myometrium Ovarian follicular cyst Bladder Broad ligament of uterus Sigmoid colon Small intestine Urethra Peritoneum Psoas muscle Iliacus muscle Obturator internus muscle Obturator externus muscle Adductor magnus muscle Acetabulum Head of femur
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Figure 3.21 Coronal T2WI of female pelvis through symphysis pubis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16.
Crura of clitoris Body of clitoris Vestibule Labia majora Bladder Endometrium Uterus—junctional zone Outer myometrium Psoas muscle Iliacus muscle Obturator externus muscle Adductor brevis muscle Pectineus muscle External iliac vessels Acetabulum Femoral head
Figure 3.22 Sagittal T2WI image of male pelvis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18.
Prostate with benign prostatic hypertrophy in central zone Peripheral zone Seminal vesicle Bladder Bladder trigone Retropubic space Urogenital diaphragm Anal canal External sphincter Anococcygeal body Anococcygeal ligament Rectum Corpus cavernosum Corpus spongiosum Symphysis pubis Sacrum Sacral canal Coccyx
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Figure 3.24 Transaxial T2WI of male pelvis. Figure 3.23 Transaxial T2WI of male pelvis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18.
Rectum Fat in perirectal space Perirectal fascia enclosing mesorectum Seminal vesicle Vas deferens Urinary bladder Perivesical venous plexus Wound scar Rectus abdominus muscle Obturator internus muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Common femoral vein Common femoral artery Femoral nerve Obturator vessels and nerve in obturator foramen Head of femur Acetabulum Sacrum
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17.
Rectum Fat in perirectal space Seminal vesicle Bladder Scar Rectus abdominus muscle Obturator internus muscle Levator ani muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Sciatic nerve Superficial inguinal lymph node Common femoral artery Common femoral vein Inferior gluteal vessels Head of femur Acetabulum Sacrum
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Figure 3.26 Transaxial T2WI of male pelvis at level of prostate gland.
Figure 3.25 Transaxial T2WI of male pelvis at level of prostate gland showing benign prostatic hypertrophy. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19.
Rectum Denonvilliers fascia Prostate—peripheral zone Urethra Surgical pseudocapsule Prostate—transitional zone with benign prostatic hypertrophy Prostatic capsule (see text) Vesicoprostatic venous plexus Bladder Pectineus muscle Obturator internus muscle Muscular slips of levator ani muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Common femoral vein Common femoral artery Obturator vessels and nerve Head of femur Acetabulum Sacrum
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19.
Anorectum Denonvilliers fascia Prostate—peripheral zone Prostate—central gland Prostatic capsule (see text) Prostate—fibromuscular band Bladder base Ischioanal fossa Spermatic cord Rectus abdominus muscle Pectineus muscle Obturator internus muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Levator ani—puborectalis portion Obturator nerve and vessels Common femoral vein Common femoral artery Head of femur Acetabulum
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Figure 3.27 Transaxial T2WI of male pelvis at level of symphysis pubis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
Anococcygeal body Anal canal Urethra Retropubic space Ischioanal fossa Sciatic nerve Levator ani—puborectalis portion Pectineus muscle Obturator externus muscle Obturator internus muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Common femoral vein Common femoral artery Pubic symphysis Ischial tuberosity
Figure 3.28 Transaxial T2WI of male pelvis at level of perineal body. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19.
Anal canal Internal sphincter Longitudinal muscle layer in intersphincteric space External sphincter Anococcygeal body Perineal body Ischioanal fossa Bulb of penis Crus of penis Corpus cavenosum Urethra Pectineus muscle Adductor longus muscle Adductor brevis muscle Obturator externus muscle Gluteus maximus muscle Common femoral vessels Ischial tuberosity Inferior pubic ramus
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Figure 3.29 Coronal T2WI of posterior male pelvis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13.
Seminal vesicle Ductus deferens Ampulla of rectum Anal canal External anal sphincter Levator ani muscle Psoas muscle Iliacus muscle Obturator internus muscle Common iliac vessels Ilium Ischium Head of femur
Figure 3.30 Coronal T2WI of male pelvis. 1. Prostate—central gland (transitional zone with benign prostatic hypertrophy, see text) 2. Prostate—peripheral zone 3. Prostatic capsule (see text) 4. Urinary bladder 5. Perineal body 6. Ischiocavernosus muscle 7. Levator ani muscle 8. Obturator internus muscle 9. Psoas muscle 10. Iliacus muscle 11. Acetabulum 12. Head of femur 13. Ischium
Figure 3.31 Coronal T2WI of anterior male pelvis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18.
Bulb of penis Crus of penis Urogenital diaphragm Prostate—peripheral zone Prostate—central gland Prostatic capsule (see text) Prostatic venous plexus Urinary bladder Ischiocavernosus muscle Levator ani muscle—levator prostate portion Obturator internus muscle Obturator externus muscle Psoas muscle Iliacus muscle Ilium Acetabulum Head of femur Ischium
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Figure 3.32 Coronal T2WI of male pelvis through symphysis pubis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Prostate—fibromuscular band Bladder Suspensory ligament of penis Urethra Corpus spongiosum Corpus cavernosum Obturator externus External iliac vessels Body of pubis Symphysis pubis
FURTHER READING
Figure 3.33 Coronal T2WI of the body of the penis. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Corpus cavernosum Corpus spongiosum Bucks fascia and tunica albuginuea Central artery of corpus cavernosum Urethra Dorsal vein of penis
Barentsz JO, Sager GJ, Witjes JA. MR imaging of the urinary bladder. Magn Reson Imaging Clin North Am 2000; 8(4):853–867. Useful review. Coakley FV, Hricak H. Radiologic anatomy of the prostate gland: a clinical approach. Radiol Clin North Am 2000; 38(1):15–30. Useful review. Debatin JF, Patak MA. MRI of the small and large bowel. Eur Radiol 1999; 9(8):1523–1534. Useful review. Hricak H, Carrington BM. MRI of the Pelvis: A Text Atlas. London: Martin Dunitz, 1991. ISBN 1-85317–027-S. Definitive text atlas of pelvic pathology. Hussain SM, Stoker J, Lame´ris JS. Anal sphincter complex: Endoanal MR imaging of normal anatomy. Radiology 1995; 197:671–677. Lengele´ B, Scalliet P. Anatomical bases for the radiological delineation of lymph node areas. Part III: Pelvis and lower limbs. Radiother Oncol 2009; 92(1):22–33. Useful recent review of lymph node anatomy. Moore KL, Dalley AF. Clinically Oriented Anatomy. 4th ed. Baltimore: Lippincott, Williams and Wilkins, 1999. ISBN 0-683-06141-0. Wellillustrated clinical anatomy text. Netter FH. Atlas of human anatomy. Ciba-Geigy, Summit, 1989. ISBN 0-914168-19-3. Invaluable bench reference. Ryu J, Kim B. MR imaging of the male and female urethra. Radiographics 2001; 21:1169–1185. Useful review. Siegelman ES, Outwater EK, Banner MP, et al. High resolution MR imaging of the vagina. Radiographics 1997; 17:1183–1203. Useful review. Vinnicombe SJ, Husband JE. In: Butler P, Mitchell AMW, Ellis H, eds. Applied Radiological Anatomy. The pelvis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. ISBN 0-S21-48110-4. Valuable overview of radiological anatomy.
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4 Cervical cancer Bernadette M. Carrington
BACKGROUND INFORMATION Epidemiology Worldwide, cervical cancer is the second most common cancer among women with 493,000 new cases and 273,000 deaths per year. There is a high incidence of up to 40 per 100,000 women in developing countries. In developed countries, cervical cancer is the third most common gynecological malignancy with an estimated annual incidence of 8.4 per 100,000 women in the United Kingdom and 7 per 100,00 women in the United States. The peak incidence is between 30 and 40 years with a second peak in women over 70. Since 1975, there has been a decreasing incidence due to national screening programs for cervical cancer and for cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN), its precursor. Etiological factors implicated in the pathogenesis of CIN and cervical cancers are multiple and include smoking, immunosuppression, and sexual activity with exposure to human papillomavirus particularly types 16 and 18. Vaccination has been introduced against these types of human papillomavirus, and the incidence of cervical cancer is likely to fall further over the next 10 to 20 years.
Histopathology Approximately 80% of cervical carcinomas are of squamous cell origin, 15% being adenocarcinomas or adenosquamous carcinomas, and 5% poorly specified carcinomas. There is some evidence that the relative incidence of adenocarcinoma is increasing. Rare cervical malignancies include malignant melanoma, sarcoma, lymphoma, and small cell carcinoma. Squamous carcinomas usually arise from the squamocolumnar junction, the position of which varies with age. Before puberty and after the menopause, it is situated inside the endocervical canal. At puberty, estrogen-influenced cervical eversion occurs, followed by squamous cell metaplasia, which has the potential to dedifferentiate into squamous cell carcinoma. Adenocarcinomas arise within the endocervical canal and are more likely to remain occult, delaying clinical presentation. There is a histopathological grading system for cervical cancer incorporating four grades, from 1 (well differentiated) to 4 (undifferentiated).
Patterns of Tumor Spread Cervical cancer spreads through the cervical stroma and into the parametrium. With increasing infiltration of the pericervical connective tissue and ligaments, disease may reach the pelvic sidewall. As a consequence of lateral tumor extension, the patient’s ureters may be engulfed and obstructed. Cranial extension occurs into the body of the uterus, when the risk of developing lymph node metastases triples. Caudal extension is to the upper vagina and eventually the lower third of the
vagina. Finally, the tumor may extend into adjacent organs, particularly the bladder and rectum, but also occasionally to involve the pelvic floor or transgress the peritoneum to invade sigmoid colon or small bowel. Lymphatic spread occurs first to the paracervical and parametrial nodes. The obturator nodes are frequently the earliest pelvic sidewall lymph nodes to be involved, and presacral or perirectal nodes can be infiltrated in the posterior pelvis. Nodal disease may extend along the internal and external iliac chains, the common iliac chains or the upper retroperitoneal nodal stations, and there may be noncontiguous involvement of lymph node groups. Rarely, involved supraclavicular nodes are detected on clinical examination at presentation. With the exception of extrapelvic nodal disease, metastases are rare at presentation and usually occur in the lungs, liver, or skeleton. Clarification of Cervical Cancer TNM and FIGO Staging Using MRI It should be remembered that the FIGO staging system is clinically based, principally on surgical and pathological findings, but also on the results of physical examination and examination under anesthesia in patients with advanced tumors unsuitable for surgery. It is designed to be applicable worldwide, irrespective of imaging resources. The TNM system takes into account nodal and visceral metastases, often identified by imaging. When such systems are applied to imaging findings, areas of uncertainty arise. For example, MR evidence of bladder muscle layer invasion without involvement of the overlying mucosa might suggest stage TNM T4 or FIGO IVA disease, but it is important to remember that true stage T4 disease requires tumor infiltration of the mucosa as well as the muscle layer (Table 4.1). When patients have tumors which infiltrate through the pelvic floor, then they have tumor extension beyond the true pelvis and are stage TNM T4 or FIGO IVA. The N stage in cervical cancer only applies to pelvic lymph nodes. If there are upper retroperitoneal lymph node metastases, then the patient has TNM M1 or FIGO IVB disease, and inguinal lymph node metastases are treated similarly.
Prognostic Indicators The features that have been shown to correlate with an adverse prognosis include the following: l
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Tumor volume; for example, in early stage disease (IB and IIA), when tumor diameter exceeds 3 cm then there is a 40% chance of lymph node involvement. Tumor stage; the five-year survival rate for stage IA is 98% and for stage IB1 is 90%. The survival rate drops as stage
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Table 4.1 Cervical Cancer: TNM and FIGO Staging Classification 2010 TNM categories
FIGO stages
T – Primary tumor TX T0 Tis T1 T1a
0 I IA
T1a1
IA1
T1a2
IA2
T1b T1b1 T1b2 T2
IB IB1 IB2 II
T2a T2a1 T2a2 T2b T3
IIA IIA1 IIA2 IIB III
T3a T3b T4
IIIA IIIB IVA
N – Regional lymph nodes NX N0 N1 M – Distant metastasis M0 M1
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IIIB
IVB
The primary tumor cannot be assessed No evidence of primary tumor Carcinoma in situ (preinvasive carcinoma) Cervical carcinoma is confined to the uterus (extension to corpus should be disregarded) Invasive carcinoma diagnosed only by microscopy. Stromal invasion with a maximum depth of 5.0 mm measured from the base of the epithelium and a horizontal spread of 7.0 mm or less. Vascular space involvement, venous or lymphatic, does not affect classification Measured stromal invasion 3.0 mm or less in depth and 7.0 mm or less in horizontal spread Measured stromal invasion more than 3.0 mm and not more than 5.0 mm with a horizontal spread 7.0 mm or less Clinically visible lesion confined to the cervix or microscopic lesion greater than T1a2/IA2 Clinically visible lesion 4.0 cm or less in greatest dimension Clinically visible lesion more than 4 cm in greatest dimension Cervical carcinoma invades beyond uterus but not to the pelvic wall or to lower third of vagina Tumor without parametrial invasion Clinically visible lesion 4.0 cm or less in greatest dimension Clinically visible lesion more than 4.0 cm in greatest dimension Tumor with parametrial invasion Tumor extends to pelvic wall and/or involves the lower third of vagina and/or causes hydronephrosis or nonfunctioning kidney Tumor involves lower third of vagina, no extension to pelvic wall Tumor extends to pelvic wall and/or causes hydronephrosis or nonfunctioning kidney Tumor invades mucosa of bladder or rectum and/or extends beyond true pelvis (bullous edema is not sufficient to classify a tumor as T4) The regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed No regional lymph node metastasis Regional lymph node metastasis No distant metastasis Distant metastasis (including peritoneal spread, involvement of supraclavicular, mediastinal, or para-aortic lymph nodes, lung, liver or bone)
rises and is 15% to 20% for stage IV disease. Particularly important is the presence of lymph node metastases such that a patient with stage IB node-negative disease has a five-year survival of more than 90% but a woman with stage IB node-positive disease has a five-year survival of 50%. Poor tumor differentiation and small cell, neuroendocrine and clear cell types. Histological features including tumor vascularity and lymphatic permeation, deep cervical invasion, tumor extension into the body of the uterus, and mixed adenosquamous tumor histological type. Diagnosis during pregnancy or at a young age. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) positivity.
Treatment Surgery Patients are eligible for surgery only if their tumor stage is less than T2a and if they have no known nodal metastases. Radical hysterectomy involves resection of the upper third of the vagina, the body and cervix of the uterus, the pericervical tissues, including all ligaments, that is the cardinal, uterosacral and round ligaments, with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy
and pelvic lymphadenectomy. Not all patients undergo a standard radical hysterectomy, and an ovary may be retained and either left in situ or transposed out of the true pelvis into the iliac fossa. Also, lymph node dissection can be extended to include upper retroperitoneal lymph nodes, or alternatively lymph node dissection may not be performed. Exceptionally, in young patients with early stage disease, local resection of the cervix (trachelectomy) can be contemplated to preserve the patient’s fertility. Patients who have positive surgical margins at the time of hysterectomy or who are lymph node positive may be referred for adjuvant radiotherapy. Radiotherapy Radiotherapy can be used to treat all stages of cervical cancer, although it is palliative in advanced disease (greater than T4). External beam radiotherapy, brachytherapy (internal placement of radioactive sources), conformal radiotherapy, and chemoradiotherapy are possible treatment methods. The current standard of care is that all patients should receive chemoradiotherapy except for those with reduced renal function, confirmed metastases, or poor performance status. There is strong evidence supporting its use with better local control of disease, a reduction in the rate of systemic metastases, and a five-year survival benefit of 6% compared to radiotherapy
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alone, although with increased toxicity rates of approximately 10%. In advanced disease (T2 or greater) and in all nodepositive patients, the pelvic nodal stations are irradiated in addition to the primary tumor. Gynecological complications of radiotherapy include cervical or vaginal stenosis, hydrosalpinx, and fistula formation. Chemotherapy Neoadjuvant chemotherapy can be used in patients with advanced disease before they go on to receive standard chemoradiotherapy. When patients undergo radical hysterectomy and histopathology demonstrates poor prognostic factors such as lymphovascular invasion, then chemotherapy may be administered concurrently with postoperative radiotherapy. Chemotherapy alone is used palliatively for patients who present with metastatic disease, or in recurrence when salvage surgery is not possible.
MRI OF CERVICAL CANCER Technique When imaging the pelvis, injection of a smooth muscle relaxant such as hyoscine N-butylbromide (Buscopan1) is recommended in eligible patients to reduce or eliminate bowel peristaltic artifact and improve image quality. Turbo spin echo sequences and a phased array pelvic coil offer advantages over conventional spin echo sequences and the body coil in terms of an improved signal-to-noise ratio. This allows high-resolution (3 mm) sections with better spatial resolution and reduced movement artifacts because of faster scan times. In addition to orthogonal plane imaging, off-axis imaging may be useful to transect the cervical tumor at 908 and/or to scan perpendicular to the interface between cervix and rectum, or cervix and bladder. Fat-suppressed imaging can be used but offers no staging advantage over conventional T1- and T2-weighted turbo spin echo sequences in cervical cancer. Body coil imaging of the upper pelvis and retroperitoneum is advised to assess for noncontiguous lymph node involvement. Endoluminal coils may be used and have been shown to improve the detection of small tumors, but do not lead to a significant change in overall staging accuracy or accuracy in identifying parametrial invasion. Conventionally administered intravenous contrast enhancement has not been shown to improve the staging of cervical cancer, but dynamic contrast-enhanced imaging may improve detection of small tumors, determination of extent of stromal and parametrial invasion, and detection or confirmation of adjacent organ invasion. Dynamic contrast-enhanced imaging can be used to assess tumor perfusion and is thus an indirect method of assessing tumor hypoxia, which inversely correlates with tumor radiosensitivity and prognosis. Diffusion-weighted imaging is being investigated in cervical cancer and early studies have demonstrated restricted diffusion in the primary with lower apparent diffusion coefficients (ADCs) in squamous cell cancer than adenocarcinoma. The ADC has been shown to negatively correlate with tumor cell density and grade, and one study demonstrated that lymph nodes with low ADCs correlate with the most metabolically active (that is metastatic) lymph nodes on PET CT.
node metastases), tumor volume assessment, the identification of deep cervical extension, and uterine body involvement. It has also been shown to have a significant impact on management in up to 50% of patients undergoing MRI examinations. Dynamic contrast-enhanced MR may also be used to predict treatment response and survival after the first two to three weeks of chemoradiotherapy when the tumor mean signal intensity, signal intensity of the least enhancing tumor fraction, and residual tumor volume all correlate with long term survival. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy has been used in cervical cancer with variable results and does not have an established role. In some studies, excess choline was detected in the primary tumor, but in other studies it was identified in normal, CIN, and cancer patients with no significant differences between the groups. In a few studies, increased lipids have been detected in cervical tumors. After treatment, MRI may be used for surveillance to allow early detection of relapse. In proven recurrence, it is used to accurately document local tumor extent and involvement of adjacent viscera in any patient for whom salvage surgery or radical radiotherapy is contemplated, and to identify nodal and metastatic tumor. MRI is better than CT for the diagnosis of local recurrence and for the determination of local extent. 18 FDG PET-CT is also known to be accurate in detecting locoregional recurrent cervical cancer, although its spatial and contrast resolution is inferior to MRI in determining local visceral involvement. When patients are ineligible for curative therapy, imaging serves to document local and metastatic tumor burden as a baseline before chemotherapy, and can be used to monitor chemotherapy response.
MRI Staging Accuracy In cervical cancer, local staging accuracy of MRI ranges from 75% to 91%. This is better than conventional CT assessment, transrectal ultrasound imaging, or clinical evaluation. MRI is better than CT for evaluation of tumor size, and more sensitive for stromal invasion, and parametrial extension. A systematic review of MRI, CT, and PET in cervical cancer indicated a pooled MRI sensitivity of 72% and specificity of 96% for the detection of pelvic lymph node metastases compared to a CTpooled sensitivity of 47% (specificity was not available) and 18 FDG PET pooled sensitivity of 79% and specificity of 99%. A relatively recent large multicenter trial has reported more disappointing results with MR sensitivity of 53% and specificity of 85% for advanced disease, compared to 42% sensitivity and 82% specificity for CT and 29% sensitivity and 99% specificity for clinical FIGO staging. MR still performed better than CT in visualizing the primary tumor and detecting parametrial and uterine body extension.
Imaging Features Primary Tumor Usually, cervical cancer is of intermediate signal intensity on T1WI and higher signal intensity on T2-weighted turbo spin echo images, compared to the normal cervical stroma. Tumors may be solid or demonstrate central necrosis, sometimes with cavitation or ulceration.
Current Indications Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the optimal method for locally staging cervical cancer because it is superior to clinical staging for overall tumor staging (including detection of lymph
Nodal Disease Local lymphatic spread to the paracervical and parametrial nodes is often not identified separate from the tumor proper.
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While the size of normal lymph nodes varies in different anatomical sites, the most robust measurement for normal nodal size is a short-axis diameter less than 1 cm. Other features suggestive of nodal involvement are round shape, an asymmetrical cluster of nodes on the pelvic sidewall, and nodal T2weighted signal intensity similar to the primary tumor. In patients with squamous cell tumors, central nodal necrosis is an accurate positive predictor of metastasis even in normalsized lymph nodes. Posttreatment: Surgery During radical hysterectomy, the vagina is oversewn and may appear bow tie shaped in the transaxial plane and may become of low signal intensity on T2WI due to fibrotic change. The bladder and bowel often adhere to its margins. The position of retained ovaries should be documented. The site of the surgical approach may be visible and lymphadenectomy clips may be identified as small areas of signal void on the pelvic sidewalls adjacent to the iliac vessels and in the upper retroperitoneum. It is important to recognize and avoid misinterpreting commonly occurring postsurgical complications such as lymphoceles, hematomata, and abscesses.
change or, occasionally, radiotherapy-induced telangiectasia can produce similar appearances. Dynamic contrast enhancement may help differentiate residual or recurrent disease from treatment effect. Currently, diffusion-weighted imaging is being investigated and may prove useful for the diagnosis of local recurrence in the future. Up to one-third of patients develop recurrent tumor in the pelvis by three years after treatment of their primary tumor. Central recurrence after hysterectomy manifests as a tumor mass arising from the vault of the vagina. All patients require assessment of locoregional nodal stations and the upper retroperitoneum. CT is necessary to assess the lungs.
Pitfalls of MRI Early-Stage Disease l
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Posttreatment: Radiotherapy Metallic marker seeds placed in the cervix to provide a landmark for external beam therapy may be visualized on MRI as signal voids. After radiotherapy there is often rapid tumor resolution and cervical reconstitution, so that within weeks there is restoration of T2WI low–signal intensity fibrous stroma, whose signal intensity is often very low due to a fibrous reaction. Occasionally, when the primary tumor has been large, only a tiny, thinned cervical remnant reconstitutes, and this appears atrophied compared with the uterine body. The uterus of a postmenopausal woman may decrease in size following radiotherapy. A patient of reproductive age will demonstrate more profound changes with decrease in size of the uterus, loss of the junctional zone anatomy, low signal intensity of the uterine body, marked thinning of the endometrium, and low signal intensity of the cervix as it reconstitutes. The ovaries shrink, become lower in signal intensity, and no longer contain physiological cysts. The vaginal wall also demonstrates a decrease in signal intensity. Posttreatment: Chemoradiotherapy Chemoradiotherapy produces different local effects. The cervix may not become as fibrosed as with radiotherapy alone, and there are often residual islands of intermediate– to high–signal intensity tissue for the first six to nine months after therapy, which gradually decrease in signal intensity, usually over the course of a year. The vaginal vault often demonstrates patchy high signal intensity, particularly posteriorly. In younger patients, the uterine body occasionally demonstrates a T2weighted striped appearance with bands of intermediate and high signal intensity. Therapy effect in other pelvic tissues may be more severe, and there is nearly always small to moderate volume free pelvic fluid which may persist for months or years. These treatment effects may resolve and then flare up unpredictably. Residual/Recurrent Disease Residual disease should be considered when the cervix retains areas of high signal intensity more than six months after radiotherapy, but this finding is not specific since inflammatory
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l
l
The identification of small tumors and differentiation from postbiopsy and inflammatory changes may be difficult. The biopsy may leave an ill-defined area of high signal intensity on T2WI, and if a cone biopsy has been performed, there may be a tissue defect present mimicking an ulcerating lesion. Nabothian cysts are cervical mucous retention cysts which may be misinterpreted as tumors. However, their typical site, spherical shape, fluid content, and thin wall differentiate them from a cancer. Early parametrial extension is sometimes difficult to identify. Preservation of hypointense fibrous stroma around the tumor has a high-negative predictive value for parametrial invasion, but, conversely, complete loss of the low– signal intensity fibrous stromal ring does not always indicate definite parametrial extension. Displacement and compression of the vaginal vault by a large exophytic cervical mass may mimic vaginal infiltration, or may be misinterpreted as preservation of the outer cervical stroma. It is important to review the images in multiple planes to determine whether the tumor is truly invading the vagina.
Late-Stage Disease l
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Identification of stage T3a disease. Lower one-third vaginal infiltration may be difficult to diagnose because of uncertainty about the demarcation between the upper twothirds and the lower one-third of the vagina (arbitrarily the vagina distal to the bladder base). Laxity of the pelvic floor may alter the vaginal position, and large exophytic tumors may compress the vaginal wall and mimic vaginal involvement. Extension along the uterosacral ligaments may be difficult to define. The radiological signs of uterosacral ligament extension are thickening or lobularity of the uretosacral ligaments in continuity with the primary tumor, with signal intensity similar to that of the primary tumor on T2WI. Extension to the pelvic sidewall (stage IIIB) is problematic because of differences in radiological interpretation. Some authorities consider tumor extending to within 0.5 to 1.0 cm of the sidewall to indicate stage IIIB tumor; others only consider tumor actually making contact with the sidewall as stage IIIB. Bladder involvement (stage IVA) may be difficult to decide upon. While tumor can alter the signal intensity of the bladder muscle layer, it is only when the mucosa is of
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tumor signal intensity and/or there are tumor masses within the bladder lumen that stage IVA disease can be diagnosed. Pelvic floor invasion can be difficult to distinguish from tumor tethering or adherence. If there is no plane between the tumor and the levator ani, but the normal low signal
intensity of the muscle is preserved and differs from that of the tumor, then adherence is likely. If the tumor extends into or through the levator ani muscle then the normal low signal of the levator ani muscle is replaced by intermediate signal intensity similar to the tumor proper.
Figure 4.1 Normal cervical anatomy in a woman of reproductive age. T2WI in (A) the sagittal plane and (B) the coronal plane, the latter providing a true transaxial image through the cervix. The endocervical lumen can be seen as a high–signal intensity structure (black asterisk) surrounded by the cervical mucosa (white asterisk). The predominantly fibrous portion of the cervical stroma returns a low signal intensity and is discerned as a low–signal intensity ring immediately adjacent to the mucosa (long white arrow), while the outer cervix has an increased proportion of smooth muscle resulting in an intermediate signal intensity (short white arrow). The cervix is surrounded by parametrium laterally and anteriorly (P in B), which is composed of fat, connective tissue, numerous blood vessels, and lymphatics. The intraorgan anatomy of the uterus is well seen in A with the endometrial cavity (e), the junctional zone of the inner myometrium (j), and the outer myometrium (m).The pelvic floor formed by the levator ani muscular plate is well illustrated in (B) (black arrows). Abbreviations: B, bladder; U, urethra; IAF, ischioanal fossa; OI, obturator internus muscle.
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Figure 4.2 T1b cervical cancer. T2WI (A) sagittal and (B) transaxial images demonstrating a small predominantly endocervical tumor in a postmenopausal patient. The mass is of high signal intensity (arrows) but is of lower signal intensity than the endocervical secretions seen cranial to the lesion. There is slight distension of the endocervical canal. Note the preservation of normal cervical tissue around the tumor indicating that it is confined. After the menopause, the junctional anatomy of the uterus is lost and the cervix is often of low signal intensity throughout. The patient has a small nabothian cyst (asterisk in A). (C) Sagittal and (D) transaxial T2WI demonstrating a small confined intermediate signal cervical tumor (T) which has a rim of low signal intensity fibrous stroma around its margin (arrows).
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Figure 4.3 T1b1 N0/N1 M0 cervical cancer. (A) Sagittal and (B) off-axis coronal T2WI demonstrating a tumor (T) occupying the endocervical canal and protruding through the external os. The tumor measures more than 4 cm in its longest axis. In B a small right pelvic sidewall lymph node is noted (arrow), which is suspicious for a metastasis because of its round size and signal intensity, which is similar to that of the tumor.
Figure 4.4 T2a cervical cancer. (A) Sagittal T2WI demonstrating a T2a1 tumor (T) involving the superior aspect of the posterior vaginal fornix (arrows) with increased signal intensity of the vaginal wall compared to more caudally within the vagina (arrowheads). A smaller volume of disease (open arrow) is infiltrating the anterior vaginal fornix but has not breached the vaginal wall to involve the uterovesical ligament (curved arrow). A small amount of free pelvic fluid (asterisk) is noted. (B) Sagittal and (C) transaxial T2WI in another patient demonstrating an exophytic cervical tumor (T), which is infiltrating the posterior vaginal fornix (arrows) with loss of the normal low signal intensity of the vaginal muscle layer. In (C), the thinning and altered signal intensity of the vaginal wall can be appreciated in comparison to the normal lateral fornices (arrowheads). Note how the vaginal vault can form a pseudocapsule around the cervical tumor mimicking an intact fibrous stroma. A tampon (asterisk) is in the right anterior vaginal lumen.
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Figure 4.4 (Continued )
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Figure 4.5 T2b N0/N1 cervical tumor with parametrial extension. Off-axis transaxial T2WI demonstrating a high–signal intensity tumor mass (T) involving the left cervix and extending from the endocervical canal throughout the entire cervical stroma with lobulated tumor extending beyond the lateral cervical margin and bulging into the parametrium (short arrows). There is also a left-sided posterior pelvic lymph node (long arrow) which, while small, is highly suspicious for an involved node because of its position and similar signal intensity to the tumor proper.
Figure 4.6 T2b cervical cancer with parametrial vascular engulfment. (A) Off-axis transaxial and (B) off-axis coronal T2WI demonstrating a cervical tumor (T) with bilateral parametrial extension and engulfment of right parametrial vessels (arrowheads). There is early lobular extension into the proximal uterosacral ligament (arrow in A).
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Figure 4.7 T2b cervical cancer with involvement of the uterovesical ligament, the anterior parametrium. (A) Sagittal T2WI demonstrating a large cervical tumor (T) with early breach of the anterior fibrous stroma and small volume extension into the inferior uterovesical ligament (arrowheads). The intact fat-filled uterovesical ligament can be seen superiorly (arrow). Note the marked endometrial distension due to obstruction of the endocervical canal by the large tumor mass. (B) Sagittal T2WI in a different patient demonstrating extensive uterovesical ligament involvement by a cervical tumor (T), which is inseparable from the low–signal intensity muscle layer of the posterior bladder wall. Small-volume pelvic ascites is present (asterisk).
Figure 4.8 T3a cervical cancer. Sagittal T2WI demonstrating a cervical tumor (T) with involvement of the anterior wall of the vagina (arrow) including the lower third (conventionally that portion of the vagina which is below the bladder). Note that the uterovesical ligament (arrowheads) is intact. There is some edema within the mucosa of the bladder, but the outer bladder wall is also intact. There is retention of fluid within the endometrial cavity due to tumor obstructing the endocervical canal.
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Figure 4.9 T3b cervical tumor with hydronephrosis. Transaxial T2WI demonstrating an extensive cervical tumor (T) invading the uterine body, extending into the parametrium, and obstructing the left ureter (arrow).
Figure 4.10 T3b cervical tumor with uterosacral extension to the pelvic sidewall. Transaxial T2WI demonstrating tumor (T) involving the entire cervix, infiltrating the left uterosacral ligament (arrows), which is thickened, and extending to within a centimeter of the left pelvic sidewall. Clinically, this tumor was fixed to the sidewall.
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Figure 4.11 T3b cervical tumor with uterosacral extension. Transaxial T2WI showing tumor extending along both uterosacral ligaments to within 0.5 cm of the sidewall on the right and to within a centimeter of the sidewall on the left. Note the lobular uterosacral tumor infiltration on the right side (arrow). Tumor extension to the pelvic sidewall is diagnosed variously by different authorities. Criteria include tumor extending to within 1 cm, tumor extending to within 0.5 cm, and tumor actually contacting the sidewall. Overall, however, early pelvic sidewall extension may be under identified.
Figure 4.12 T4 cervical cancer invading the bladder. Sagittal T2WI showing a large tumor (T) infiltrating the whole uterus and extending through the bladder into the mucosa (arrows). The mucosa should demonstrate the same signal intensity as the tumor proper to allow diagnosis of bladder infiltration. Note the normal low–signal intensity muscle layer of the bladder inferiorly (asterisk) and the presence of overlying mucosal bullous edema producing high signal intensity change within the mucosa (arrowheads), which should not be diagnosed as tumor infiltration.
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Figure 4.13 T4 cervical cancer invading the bladder. (A) Transaxial T2WI, (B) fat suppressed T2WI, and (C) sagittal T2WI. There is a large cervical tumor (T) invading the bladder in a left posterior location with a mass (arrow) of similar signal intensity to the tumor proper seen within the bladder lumen. Note that there is bladder mucosal edema (arrowheads) in B partially overlying the intravesical tumor but also extending over the posterior bladder wall. The central portion of the bladder wall in A and B is also abnormal but signal intensity is higher than the tumor proper and represents edema. (B) A portion of the bladder wall is shown to be partially infiltrated but to retain an intact though edematous inner muscle layer (small arrows), bladder muscle layer (M). In (C) the abnormal signal intensity of the posterior bladder muscle layer and its retraction toward the tumor can be appreciated. Note the apparent abnormal signal intensity at the dome of the bladder (asterisk) due to artifact from adjacent peristalsing small bowel. To overcome this, hyoscine butylbromide (Buscopan) could be administered if necessary.
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Figure 4.14 T3b cervical tumor with partial thickness rectal involvement. Transaxial T2WI showing a cervical tumor (T) extending through the perirectal fat to infiltrate the outer rectum on the left side (arrows). Disease extends around the left uterosacral ligament to the pelvic sidewall (open arrow). The overlying rectal mucosa (arrowheads) is intact but of high signal intensity indicating edema or hemorrhage and, because of this, although tumor is obviously invading the rectal wall, the stage is T3b by TNM criteria. Note a right adnexal mass (M) of similar signal intensity to the tumor proper due to involvement of the ovary by the primary cervical tumor.
Figure 4.15 T4 cervical cancer involving the bladder, rectum, urethra, and pelvic floor musculature. (A) Sagittal, (B, C) transaxial, and (D) coronal T2WI demonstrating a huge cervical tumor (T) involving the bladder (arrows in A and B), the rectum (open arrows in A and B), the urethra (curved arrows in A and C), and the puborectalis component of the left levator ani muscle (arrowheads in D). The mucosa of the bladder or rectum has to be involved to quality for stage T4 disease. Local extension beyond the pelvis, in this case into the ischioanal fossa, also makes the tumor stage T4.
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Figure 4.15 (Continued )
Figure 4.16 T4 cervical cancer. Sagittal T2WI demonstrating a large cervical tumor (T) extending into the uterovesical ligament (arrows) and incompletely involving the bladder muscle layer with overlying mucosal edema. Superoposteriorly the tumor breaches the peritoneum to involve an adjacent small bowel loop (arrowheads), making this a T4 tumor.
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Figure 4.17 Lymph node metastases. (A) Off-axis coronal T2WI demonstrating a small paracervical lymph node metastasis (arrow) adjacent to a cervical tumor (T), (B) sagittal, and (C, D) off-axis transaxial T2WI in a different patient demonstrating a large cervical tumor (T) invading the uterovesical ligament (arrows) and extending into the lower third of the vagina (asterisk). A large right parametrial lymph node metastasis (open arrow) is seen in C. Bilateral obturator (curved arrows) and perirectal lymph node metastases (arrowheads) are also present. Parametrial lymph node metastases are often small but are of similar signal intensity to the tumor proper and appear separate from it on all planes. They are infrequently seen because parametrial extension of the primary tumor often engulfs them. In this case, the perirectal and right obturator lymph nodes are small but are highly likely to be metastatic because they are of similar signal intensity to the primary tumor.
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Figure 4.18 Internal iliac and perirectal lymph node metastases. Transaxial T2WI demonstrating a high–signal intensity primary cervical tumor (T) with metastatic spread to a right internal iliac (arrow) and two perirectal lymph nodes (open arrows). The right internal iliac lymph node has undergone central nodal necrosis as shown by irregular very high signal intensity within its center, and it has an irregular anterior margin indicating extracapsular spread.
Figure 4.19 Presacral lymph node metastases in cervical cancer. Sagittal T2WI demonstrating a presacral node at S2 level (arrow), which has the same signal intensity as the tumor proper (T) and is likely to be involved by tumor. Overlooked presacral lymph nodes may be excluded from the radiotherapy field, particularly if they are situated in the sacral concavity below S3, because the posterior margin of the field is normally vertically aligned at the S2/ S3 junction.
Figure 4.20 External and common iliac lymph node metastases. (A) Coronal T1WI showing multiple enlarged right pelvic sidewall lymph nodes (arrows). (B) Transaxial T1WI in a different patient. There are left common iliac lymph node metastases (open arrows) replacing the fat posterior to the vessels, causing an asymmetrical appearance “filled in fat sign.” This site for lymph node metastases can be overlooked easily. There is a metastasis (M) in the right medial ilium and malignant infiltration of the left sacrum (arrowhead) directly underlying the metastatic lymph node mass. The left sacral infiltration could be due to hematogenous spread or direct bone erosion by the lymph node disease. Note the asymmetry of the iliopsoas muscles with increase in size on the left side. This is most likely to be due to edema arising from impaired lymphatic drainage.
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Figure 4.21 Pelvic metastatic lymph nodes. (A) Transaxial T2WI demonstrating a primary tumor (T) with a huge left external iliac lymph node mass (arrows) showing central necrosis (n) and extracapsular extension as well as encasing the left external iliac artery (arrowhead). The bladder (B) is displaced to the right. The patient also has bilateral adnexal cysts (asterisks). It is unusual to have such a large lymph node metastasis at presentation. (B) Transaxial T2WI showing a small right obturator lymph node (arrow) with central nodal necrosis exhibiting high signal intensity greater than pelvic fat. Histopathological analysis confirmed metastatic tumor in this node. In squamous cell carcinoma, T2weighted central nodal necrosis is a highly accurate predictor of metastatic nodal infiltration even if the lymph node is not enlarged by size criteria. If there is uncertainty whether T2-weighted high signal intensity in a node is fat or central nodal necrosis, the T1WI should be scrutinized for central high signal intensity, and, if there is persisting uncertainty, then fat-suppressed imaging (fat saturation or STIR sequences) may help. (C) Off-axis transaxial T2WI demonstrating a large cervical primary tumor (T) with parametrial extension and a left obturator lymph node (arrow) which is of normal size but of similar signal intensity to the tumor proper. This finding indicates likely metastatic infiltration.
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Figure 4.22 Metastases in cervical cancer. (A) Sagittal T2WI demonstrating a lower vaginal metastasis (M), which is separated from the primary cervical tumor (T). (B) Coronal T1WI demonstrating upper retroperitoneal lymph node metastases (arrows) in addition to left pelvic sidewall lymph node metastases (open arrow). (C) Off-axis coronal T1W fat-suppressed post contrast image in a different patient showing a large necrotic liver metastasis (M) with a satellite lesion (arrow). (D) Sagittal and (E) transaxial T2WI in another patient demonstrating a large ulcerating cervical tumor (T) invading the posterior bladder (arrows) and extending to the right pelvic sidewall (curved arrows) to abut the edematous piriformis muscle. Tumor is also infiltrating the peritoneum, which is thickened (arrowheads in D). There is a bladder catheter in situ. (Continued )
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Figure 4.22 (Continued )
Figure 4.23 Contrast-enhanced MRI and diffusion-weighted MRI in cervical cancer. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI demonstrating a small volume cervical tumor (T), which is thinning the outer cervix (arrowhead in B). There are multiple prominent parametrial veins producing tubular high signal intensity within the parametrium. (C) Diffusion-weighted image (b-value, 800) and (D) ADC map demonstrate restricted diffusion within the cervical tumor (asterisks) and a low ADC. Note the apparent restricted diffusion demonstrated by the parametrial vessels which are also extending into the presacral space. These areas show high signal on the ADC map (D) confirming that this is due to T2 shine through. Higher b-value imaging may have been useful to prevent this T2 shine through effect. (E) Signal enhancement curve of the cervical tumor demonstrating rapid early enhancement in keeping with a malignant lesion.
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Figure 4.23 (Continued )
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Figure 4.24 Small tumors and postbiopsy change. (A) Off-axis coronal T2W and (B) transaxial T1WI in a patient who was imaged a week after biopsy. A focal lesion (arrows) was identified in the right inferior cervix which demonstrated some high signal intensity on the T1WI and corresponded to the cervical biopsy site. Without appropriate clinical information, this lesion could quite easily be mistaken for a small residual tumor.
Figure 4.25 Loss of cervical fibrous stroma. Transaxial T2WI demonstrating a tumor (T) with complete loss of the low–signal intensity fibrous stroma but with a smooth margin with the parametrial fat. Absence of the low–signal intensity fibrous stromal ring is not an absolute indicator of tumor extension into the parametrium, and this lesion is stage T1.
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Figure 4.26 The upper vagina mimicking the outer cervical stroma. (A, B) Off-axis transaxial T2WI with a cervical tumor (T) seen in A surrounded by a low–signal intensity rim (arrows), which was the vaginal wall. More cranially in B the tumor can be seen to extend into the parametrium (arrowheads). The left bladder wall is irregularly thickened and of altered signal intensity due to infiltration by a large left pelvic sidewall lymph node metastasis (out of plane on this image) and hemorrhage from this is producing the altered signal intensity of the urine and a fluid-fluid level (in A).
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Figure 4.27 Appearances postradical hysterectomy. Transaxial (A) and sagittal (B) T2WI demonstrating the oversewn vaginal vault (V), containing small signal voids (arrowheads) due to surgical clips, inseparable from the posterior wall of the bladder and the peritoneal reflection (arrows). The abdominal wall surgical scar is well seen (open arrows in A).
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Figure 4.28 Appearances after bilateral pelvic sidewall lymph node dissection. Transaxial T2WI showing low–signal intensity linear scarring (arrows) extending parallel to the pelvic sidewalls. There is also post laparotomy thickening of the pelvic peritoneum (arrowheads). The retained right ovary (open arrow) is adherent to the pelvic sidewall scarring.
Figure 4.29 Appearances after bilateral ovarian transposition. Transaxial (A) T1WI and (B) T2WI in a patient who underwent ovarian transposition at the time of radical hysterectomy. The ovaries (arrows) have been relocated to the iliac fossae. This procedure is performed to prevent the ovaries being included in a postoperative radiation field and thereby preserve ovarian function. The ovaries should not be confused with tumor masses.
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Figure 4.30 Central pelvic and subcutaneous hematoma complicating radical hysterectomy. (A) Transaxial T1WI, (B) transaxial T2WI, and (C) sagittal T2WI in which a central hematoma (H) is seen with characteristic high signal intensity on the T1WI, and T2-weighted heterogeneous appearance with a low–signal intensity rim and mixed high and intermediate signal intensity content. Compared to the central pelvic hematoma, the small subcutaneous hematoma (arrows) is of similar signal intensity. There is loculated ascites (A) above the hematoma in C. (D) Sagittal T2WI performed three months later demonstrates the small residuum of the hematoma (arrows) but persistent ascites (A). The appearance of hematomata varies with their age.
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Figure 4.31 Unilocular lymphocele after radical hysterectomy. Transaxial (A) T1WI and (B) T2WI showing a small left-sided unilocular lymphocele (arrow) in a common position adjacent to the external iliac vessels. Lymphoceles are extraretroperitoneal collections of lymph fluid caused by surgical disruption of lymphatic trunks. They demonstrate signal intensity characteristics similar to water on T1WI and T2WI, are usually unilocular and thin walled, and often resorb spontaneously. Occasionally, septations may be seen within larger lymphoceles.
Figure 4.32 Response of cervical tumor to radiotherapy. Sagittal T2WI (A) at presentation, (B) 2 months, and (C) 10 months after radiotherapy. The intermediate signal intensity cervical tumor (T) can be readily identified in A. (B) After two months there is only a small area of residual abnormal signal intensity (arrow) in the posterior lip of the cervix. The anterior lip of the cervix has reconstituted. The uterine body has lost its zonal differentiation but the outer myometrium (M) is still of normal signal intensity. (C) Ten months after radiotherapy, the cervix (arrows) and vagina (arrowheads) are of intense low signal intensity indicating a good treatment response. The uterus has atrophied and the uterine body (U) is of low signal intensity with loss of zonal anatomy.
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Figure 4.32 (Continued )
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Figure 4.33 Evolution of chemoradiotherapy effect. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI pretreatment demonstrating a stage IIb cervical tumor (T), which is involving the vaginal vault (arrowhead). There is also adherence to the anterior mesorectal fascia (arrows). (C) sagittal T2WI three months post chemoradiotherapy, radiation therapy marker seeds are now in situ and producing a metallic bloom artifact, which is partially obscuring the cervical tissue on the sagittal view. There has been reduction in size and signal intensity of the cervix and uterine body. Note the development of more pelvic ascites (A) and treatment effect within the bladder where there is mucosal edema (arrowheads). High signal intensity of the rectal mucosa is also noted (open arrows). More generalized edematous change is also appreciated, most obviously in the retropubic space (asterisk). (D) Sagittal T2WI seven months post chemoradiotherapy. The cervix remains small and of slightly heterogeneous low signal intensity. The bladder mucosal edema which was present at 3 months has essentially resolved and apparent thinning of the superior bladder wall muscle layer (open arrows) is due to a treatment reaction within portions of the muscle. There is persisting abnormal signal intensity within the rectoanal mucosa. Note that the uterine body has increased in size and signal intensity, presumably reflecting an edematous/inflammatory reaction. There has been slight increase in volume of posterior ascites (A). The retropubic edema (asterisk) persists. (E) Sagittal T2WI 10 months after chemoradiotherapy. The cervix remains of heterogeneous low signal intensity. The uterine body junctional zone and inner myometrium are reduced in signal intensity compared to the seven months examination (asterisks). There is new mucosal edema of the bladder trigone (arrowheads). Rectal mucosal high signal intensity is again noted (curved arrows) but has improved. The volume of ascites (A) is little changed. The edematous change in the retropubic space has resolved. Note that the superior bladder wall muscle layer has reduced in signal intensity and appears more uniform. After chemoradiotherapy treatment effect can wax and wane. Because of uncertainty about residual altered cervical signal intensity, patients may have repeated MRI assessment or biopsy. 18FDG PET CT has been shown to be effective in the detection of post chemoradiotherapy recurrence. (Continued )
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Figure 4.33 (Continued )
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Figure 4.34 Response of the ovaries to radiotherapy. Off-axis transaxial T2WI (A) before and (B) four months after radiotherapy. (A) The ovaries (arrows) have multiple follicular cysts present with high–signal intensity central stroma. (B) The ovaries (arrows) have shrunk, lost their follicular cysts, and the signal intensity of the central stroma has decreased.
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Figure 4.35 Radiotherapy-induced vesicouterine fistula. (A) and (B) sagittal T2WI. (A) There is a large necrotic cervical tumor (T) involving the uterine body and extending through the bladder wall to involve the mucosa (arrows). (B) Three months post treatment, a fistula (arrow) can be seen and the cervical cavity and vagina are fluid filled (open arrows). The uterus has decreased in size and the endometrial cavity is visualized (E). The posterior cervix has partially reconstituted (arrowheads).
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Figure 4.36 Severe chemoradiotherapy effect with a large vesicovaginal fistula. (A) Sagittal T2WI pretreatment demonstrating a cervical tumor (T) involving the anterior rectum (arrows) and the posterosuperior bladder (arrowheads) and superior vaginal vault. Sagittal (B) T2WI and (C) STIR images 12 months after chemoradiotherapy. The cervical tumor has completely responded, but there has been no reconstitution of the cervix or upper vagina, and there is a large vesicovaginal fistula (arrowheads) containing air anteriorly and fluid posteriorly. The residual bladder wall (arrows) demonstrates thickening and patchy high and low signal intensity. The anterior rectal wall is deficient and the posterior rectal wall is of abnormal high signal intensity (open arrows). Abnormal high signal intensity is seen within the residual vagina representing treatment effect (curved arrows in B), and there is air in the lower vagina. Extensive presacral fluid (F) is noted. This is a nonspecific finding and can occur as a treatment effect, particularly when there is inflammation or infection in the pelvis, but may also be identified in patients with disease relapse. Note small-volume ascites (A).
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Figure 4.37 Postradiotherapy cervical stenosis with hydrometria. Sagittal T2WI demonstrating a distended high–signal intensity endometrial cavity due to a stenotic internal os with the cervix demonstrating low signal intensity after radiotherapy. There is a metallic artifact from a radiotherapy marker seed (arrowheads). A fluid/debris level is noted posteriorly (arrows). The bladder (B) and urethra (curved arrows) are compressed and distorted by the hydrometria.
Figure 4.38 (Continued )
Figure 4.38 Postradiotherapy hematometria. (A, B) Transaxial T1WI and T2WI and (C) sagittal T2WI. The distended uterus (arrows) contains a hematometria (H) as shown by high signal intensity on T1WI and whorled intermediate and high signal intensity on T2WI. The apparent focal lesion (asterisk) in the left anterior uterine fundus represents hematoma of a different age to the rest of the uterine cavity. The patient went on to have a hysterectomy and the distension of the uterine cavity was confirmed to be due to altered blood. There was no evidence of malignancy.
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Figure 4.39 Postchemoradiotherapy hydrometria and hematocolpos with residual cervical cancer. (A) Sagittal T2WI pretreatment demonstrating a large cervical tumor (T) with extension into the uterovesical ligament (arrowheads). The vagina has been packed because of intractable PV bleeding and an admixture of packing material and hemorrhage is noted (asterisk). The urethral portion of a bladder catheter is seen (arrows). (B) Sagittal and (C) transaxial T2WI seven months after treatment demonstrating distension of the endometrial cavity due to stenosis of the internal os. There is also marked distension of the vagina with a fluid-fluid level within it (arrows) and a small amount of clot is adherent to the right anterior wall (arrowheads in C). There is residual tumor (T) in the cervix and the patient has developed a lower sacral bone metastasis (M).
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Figure 4.40 Residual cervical cancer. Sagittal T2WI (A) pretreatment and (B) six months post radiotherapy. (A) A cavitating high–signal intensity tumor (T) is present. Two metallic marker seeds (arrows) have been placed in the anterior and posterior lips of the cervix at examination under anesthesia to guide the external beam radiotherapy. These clips demonstrate the bloom susceptibility artifact associated with metal. (C) After treatment there remains a high–signal intensity mass (M) in the cervix, which shows no evidence of reconstituting. The rest of the uterus has atrophied. One marker seed remains in the posterior lip. The patient underwent salvage hysterectomy with cystectomy (anterior pelvic clearance) and residual adenocarcinoma was confirmed. Residual high signal intensity within the cervix more than six months after radiotherapy warrants investigation. The abnormality may be due to tumor or occasionally radiation-induced edema and telangiectasia. Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI may help differentiate between the two conditions.
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Figure 4.41 Nonresponse of primary tumor and postchemoradiotherapy progression. Sagittal T2WI (A) immediately after chemoradiotherapy, (B) two months, and (C) six months later. The cervical tumor mass (T) remains after treatment and increases in size and extent to involve the posterior bladder wall (arrows in C) and extend through the uterine myometrium (arrowheads in C).
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Figure 4.42 Recurrent cervical cancer. Sagittal T2WI (A) six months and (B) eight months after chemoradiotherapy. There is irregular high–T2W signal intensity within the atrophied cervix (arrows), which was highly suspicious for recurrent tumor. Initial biopsy was inconclusive, and on reimaging the abnormal high signal intensity persisted although it appeared slightly smaller and well defined. A repeat biopsy confirmed recurrent tumor. Note the post treatment effect in the bladder with high signal intensity of the mucosa (arrowheads in A) and slight increase in signal intensity of the rectoanal mucosa (open arrows in A and B). A small amount of pelvic ascites (A) is present. Presacral fluid (F in A) was present at six months but had resolved by eight months.
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Figure 4.43 Parametrial recurrence. Transaxial T2WI (A) at presentation, (B) five months after chemoradiotherapy, (C) seven months after chemoradiotherapy and (D) nine months after chemoradiotherapy. The cervical tumor (T) is seen to be predominantly left sided and to extend into the parametrium at presentation. Five months after therapy, there is low signal intensity of the reconstituted cervix, although the left side remains smoothly expanded (arrows) compared to the right side. After seven months, there is alteration in signal intensity within the left cervix and parametrial region with patchy ill defined higher signal intensity (arrowheads) now noted together with some irregularity of the cervical/parametrial interface. By nine months the ill-defined high signal intensity has increased in extent and overall size with a posterior bulge into the mesorectal fascia (open arrow) and there is a more ragged interface with the parametrial fat. The recurrence does not extend to the pelvic sidewall. The patient underwent a PET CT which demonstrated high metabolic activity within this mass and no evidence of lymph node metastases. The patient therefore underwent salvage surgery.
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Figure 4.44 Recurrent cervical cancer with vesicovaginal and vesicorectal fistulae and involvement of the left sciatic nerve. (A, B) Sagittal, (C) transaxial, and (D) coronal T2WI demonstrating a necrotic thick-walled cervical tumor recurrence (arrows) with a tumor fistula between the recurrence and the rectosigmoid (arrowheads in A), and a vesicovaginal fistula (open arrow in B and C). Tumor is also involving the left lumbosacral plexus and sciatic nerve (curved arrows in D). The nerve involvement means that the patient is ineligible for salvage surgery.
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Figure 4.45 Recurrent common iliac lymph node metastasis. (A) Coronal and (B) transaxial T1WI showing a small left common iliac nodal mass (arrows), which was producing back pain. The patient had undergone radiotherapy to the primary tumor and pelvic nodal stations two years before. In these circumstances, nodal recurrences are often at or above the margin of the field, here at L5/S1 level. Note the high signal intensity of the pelvic marrow due to fat replacement, but preservation of hemopoietic marrow in L5 vertebral body. The metastatic nodes may erode into adjacent bone and produce severe pain.
Figure 4.46 Plaque-like tumor recurrence after salvage hysterectomy. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI in a patient who previously underwent salvage hysterectomy and a Hartman’s procedure for local cervical tumor recurrence. There is plaque-like tumor (T) extending posteriorly and involving the posterosuperior bladder (arrow in A), the vagina vault (arrowhead in A), the rectal stump (open arrow in A), and both ureters (curved arrows in B). The tumor is growing along the peritoneal reflection (hatched arrows) and there are adherent loops of small bowel. After a short interval, this patient developed complete small bowel obstruction.
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Figure 4.47 Anterior pelvic clearance. Sagittal T2WI. The bladder, urethra, uterus, and vagina have been removed and the levator ani muscles oversewn (arrows). The omentum (Om) has been placed in the surgical bed to prevent small bowel prolapsing inferiorly.
Figure 4.48 Anterior pelvic clearance with neovagina formation. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI demonstrating absence of the anterior pelvic organs, retention of the rectum (R), and formation of a neovagina (V) from colon. Omentum (Om) has been placed in the surgical bed.
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FURTHER READING Bipat S, Gln AFS, van der Velden J, et al. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging in staging of uterine cervical carcinoma: a systematic review. Gynecol Oncol 2003; 91:59–66. Analysis of relative merits of CT and MRI. Booth SJ, Pickles MD, Turbull LW. In vivo magnetic resonance spectroscopy of gynaecological tumours at 3.0 Telsa. BJOG 2009; 116:300–303. This article reviews spectroscopic findings in a variety of gynecological lesions. Choi EK, Kim JK, Choi HJ, et al. Node-by-node correlation between MR and PET/CT in patients with uterine cervical cancer: diffusionweighted imaging versus size-based criteria on T2WI. Eur Radiol 2009; 19:2024–2032. This article compares diffusion-weighted MRI nodal findings in cervical cancer with 18FDG PET-CT and MR size criteria. Liu Y, Bai R, Sun H, et al. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of uterine cervical cancer. J Comput Assist Tomogr 2009; 33:858–862. This article describes the diffusion-weighted MRI findings in cervical cancer. Mitchell DG, Snyder B, Coakley F, et al. Early cervical cancer: tumour delineation by magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography and clinical examination, verified by pathological results. J Clin Oncol 2006; 24:5687–5694. Recent multicenter study of cervical cancer staging.
Mitchell DG, Snyder B, Coakley F, et al. Early invasive cervical cancer: MRI predictors of lymphatic metastases in the ACRIN 6651/GOG 183 intergroup study. Gynecol Oncol 2009; 112:95–103. Further report by the multicenter study group on predicting lymph node status. Rockall AG, Reznek RH. Uterine and cervical tumours. In: Husband Janet ES, Reznek R, eds. Imaging in Oncology. 3rd ed. 2010:431– 470. Considers cross-sectional imaging of these tumors and puts MRI in context. Small W, Vern TZ, Rademaker A, et al. A prospective trial comparing lymphangiogram, cross-sectional imaging, and positron emission tomography scan in the detection of lymph node metastasis in locally advanced cervical cancer. Am J Clin Oncol 2010; 33:89–93. Interesting article with a small patient cohort which identifies the imaging predictors of one-year disease-free survival. Vale CL, Tierney JF, Davidson SE, et al. Substantial improvement in UK cervical cancer survival with chemoradiotherapy: results of a royal college of radiologists’ audit. Clin Oncol 2010; 22:590–601. Current U.K. cervical cancer chemoradiotherapy survival figures and toxicity. Yuh WTC, Mayr NA, Jarjoura D, et al. Predicting control of primary tumour and survival by DCE MRI during early therapy in cervical cancer. Invest Radiol 2009; 44:343–350. This article describes the DCE MRI features predicting response to chemoradiotherapy.
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5 Endometrial cancer Maryna Brochwicz-Lewinski
BACKGROUND INFORMATION Epidemiology Endometrial cancer is the seventh most common cancer worldwide and accounts for 1% to 2% of deaths from cancer. It is the most common gynecological malignancy in North America and Western Europe, accounting for 7045 cases in the United Kingdom and 1659 deaths in 2006. Incidence in both the United States and Britain is similar at 23.5 and 22.8 per 100,000 population, and U.K. incidence has shown a 34% increase between 1993 and 2006, predominantly in those aged 60 to 79. Presentation is most commonly with postmenopausal bleeding or discharge. Endometrial cancer is associated with a “Western” lifestyle with a quoted incidence of only 3 per 100,000 in less developed countries. Etiological factors include unopposed estrogen exposure, hormone replacement therapy, polycystic ovary syndrome, and obesity. Long-term treatment for breast cancer with tamoxifen is also associated with an increased risk of endometrial malignancy as are women with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) who may develop endometrial malignancy premenopausally.
endocervical canal or via myometrial invasion extending below the isthmus of the uterus into the cervical stroma. Lymphatic spread from the upper corpus and fundus is via the infundibulopelvic ligament to the common iliac and para-aortic lymph nodes. The lower corpus and cervix drain via parametrial, paracervical, and obturator nodes to the external and internal iliac nodal groups and thence to the common iliac and para-aortic nodes. Sentinel node studies suggest 10% to 30% of endometrial carcinoma metastases are located exclusively in the high para-aortic nodes. The presence of positive pelvic node metastases indicates a 50% probability of paraaortic metastases. Hematogenous metastases can occur to lungs, liver, or bones but are rare at presentation.
TNM and FIGO Classification Revised FIGO staging of 2008 altered the staging of uterine tumors and introduced new staging for sarcomatous lesions (Table 5.1).
Prognostic Indicators Histopathology Most endometrial tumors are of glandular epithelial origin and are adenocarcinomas of endometrioid type. Other types of tumors account for approximately 25% of endometrial cancers and include papillary serous and clear cell. Generally, these less common tumor types are associated with a poorer prognosis. Tumors are graded from 1 (well differentiated) to 3 (poorly differentiated), with all clear cell and papillary serous tumors regarded as grade 3. Uterine sarcomas of mesenchymal origin, including endometrial stromal sarcoma, adenosarcomas, carcinosarcomas (formerly mixed Mu¨llerian tumor), and leiomyosarcomas, are rare uterine malignancies accounting for less than 3% of uterine tumors.
Patterns of Tumor Spread Endometrial cancer arises within the glandular epithelium, often in a polypoidal or focal pattern and presents as a friable mass. Multifocal disease is well recognized with plaques of disease within the endometrial cavity. Tumor spreads as a result of direct invasion into the adjacent myometrium, initially at the base of the tumor, and then more extensively through the myometrium to the serosal surface. Once tumor has transgressed the serosa, direct peritoneal spread and invasion into adjacent organs, in particular the bladder, rectum or sigmoid may occur. Peritoneal spread is also seen in those tumors involving the uterine cornua, extending via the fallopian tubes to the adnexa and peritoneal cavity. Endometrial tumors may involve the cervix either by direct extension into the
Endometrial cancer is generally associated with a favorable outcome with an overall five-year survival rate of approximately 75%, with rates of up to 96% quoted for stage I disease. This is because abnormal bleeding in postmenopausal women is easily recognized and 70% of patients present with disease confined to the uterus. Advanced disease, however, has fiveyear survival rates of approximately 17%. Prognostic indicators include tumor type, tumor grade, and presence of deep myometrial invasion. Depth of myometrial invasion correlates with prevalence of lymph node metastatic disease, which increases from 3% with superficial myometrial invasion, to 46% with deep myometrial invasion. Patients considered in a high-risk group include all patients with papillary serous or clear cell histology and those with grade 3 morphology, deep myometrial invasion, and cervical stromal invasion. These features may be more important prognostically than nodal status in patients with disease confined to the corpus. Predictors for hematogenous relapse include high grade tumor, deep myometrial invasion, and lymphovascular space invasion.
Treatment Surgery Choice of treatment for endometrial cancer has hitherto been guided by patient variables and the preoperative assessment of risk of extrauterine disease, with low-risk patients (well-differentiated tumors grades 1 to 2, FIGO stage 1A) treated with hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy and highrisk patients additionally treated with full-pelvic and paraaortic lymph node dissection in accordance with FIGO staging
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Table 5.1 FIGO and TNM Classification of Carcinoma of the Endometrium TNM classification TX T0 Tis T1 T1a T1b T2 T3a T3b T4 NX N0 N1 N2 M0 M1
FIGO stage
I IA IB II IIIA IIIB IVA
IIIC1 IIIC2
IVB
Description of tumor extent Cannot assess primary tumor No evidence of primary tumor Preinvasive carcinoma. Carcinoma in situ Tumor confined to the uterine corpus Tumor confined to the endometrium or invades less than one-half of the myometrium Tumor invasion into one-half or more of the myometrium Tumor invasion of stromal connective tissue of cervix but does not extend beyond uterus Involvement of the uterine serosa, or adnexae (direct extension or metastasis) Vaginal involvement (direct extension or metastasis) or involvement of the parametrium Invasion of bladder and/or bowel mucosa (bullous edema is not adequate to classify tumor as T4) Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed No regional lymph node metastasis. Regional lymph node metastasis to pelvic lymph nodes. Regional lymph node metastasis to para-aortic lymph nodes, with or without positive pelvic lymph nodes No distant metastasis. Distant metastasis (includes metastasis to inguinal lymph nodes intraperitoneal disease or lung, liver, or bone. It omits metastasis to para-aortic lymph nodes, vagina, pelvic serosa, or adnexae)
(lymph node resection may be laparoscopic). However, two recent large randomized trials with nearly 2000 patients have not shown any survival benefit from surgical staging with pelvic lymph node resection but did show a significant increase in postoperative complications. Many centers in the United Kingdom have therefore discontinued routine lymph node resection unless there are enlarged nodes, but there remains variation in practice worldwide. Patients with papillary serous tumors require omentectomy and thorough examination of the peritoneum as they behave in a similar fashion to ovarian tumors. Selected low-risk cases may be treated laparoscopically where there is local expertise. Radiotherapy and Chemotherapy Adjuvant radiotherapy in the form of brachytherapy may be given to the vaginal vault in those with grade 2 or worse tumor, and external beam radiotherapy to patients with pelvic lymph node metastases to control locoregional disease. Recent large studies however have not shown overall survival benefit from radiotherapy and its role remains controversial. Overall relapse rates are quoted at 15% to 30% and therefore many patients will not recur and may not need radiotherapy. Most local recurrences are vaginal and 90% respond to brachytherapy at the time of recurrence. Even with pelvic radiotherapy, high-risk patients appear to show significant extrapelvic recurrence which is generally unsalvageable. There are ongoing trials to assess potential improvements in the delivery of radiotherapy and administration of systemic chemotherapy.
MRI OF ENDOMETRIAL CANCER Technique Patients should ideally be imaged using a phased array coil. An antispasmodic agent to reduce bowel peristalsis (20 mg hyoscine butylbromide) should be given either intravenously or intramuscularly. T2W imaging should be performed in at least two planes with one sequence at right angles to the long axis of the uterus to optimally assess myometrial invasion. If there is any suggestion of cervical involvement then a further sequence perpendicular to the axis of the cervix may be of benefit. As
direct nodal metastasis to the para-aortic region can occur, T1-weighted imaging of the upper abdomen should be performed. This also offers the advantage of visualizing the kidneys. Postcontrast imaging can be helpful in establishing depth of myometrial invasion; both dynamic contrast-enhanced imaging and high-resolution single acquisition at 2 minutes 30 seconds are described, with several studies showing improved accuracy. Ideally, imaging should be obtained in the plane best demonstrating the tumor/myometrial interface. Evidence is emerging of the usefulness of diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) in the staging of endometrial tumors as the mean apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) value of endometrial cancer is lower than that of myometrium, but further research is needed.
Current Indications There is considerable debate regarding the usefulness of MRI in the work-up of endometrial cancer, which has intensified with the publication of studies questioning the benefit of lymph node resection. Lymph node resection, however, remains part of FIGO staging for all patients with grade 3 tumors or greater than 50% myometrial invasion. The main use of MRI is to select high-risk patients to plan adjuvant or alternative therapies and to identify those patients who would benefit from surgery in a specialist center with dedicated gynecological oncologists. Although some specialist centers now perform little MR for endometrial cancer, widely accepted indications include highgrade endometrioid and all papillary serous or clear cell tumors, those in whom advanced disease is suspected, patients with a contraindication to surgical staging, and those in whom cervical stenosis precludes curettage. Preoperative MR assessment of lymph nodes is limited as nodal size often shows no correlation with metastases, but MRI may help to guide selective lymph node sampling. Lymph node–specific contrast agents have shown some promise in pelvic tumors, but these are not commercially available at present. MR does not have a routine use in surveillance, but may be useful in selected patients where surgery has not been
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performed or where there is felt to be a high risk of recurrence. Where tumor recurrence is diagnosed, the role of MR is to establish its extent, particularly the involvement of pelvic organs and the pelvic sidewall to inform management decisions.
Staging Accuracy Compared to Other Imaging Techniques Overall staging accuracy for MR is 85% to 95%, with metaanalysis for deep myometrial invasion reporting sensitivities of 78% to 100% and specificities of 71% to 100%. Negative predictive value for cervical invasion is high (>90%), which is likely to reflect the low pretest probability of cervical involvement. A recent study has shown DWI to improve staging accuracy to 94% compared with 88% for contrast enhanced MR. MR remains superior to both ultrasound and CT in assessing myometrial invasion, and similar to CT in the assessment of distant disease and lymph node involvement. The value of F18 FDG PET-CT in staging has not been fully established.
Imaging Features Primary Tumor On unenhanced T1W images, endometrial cancer is isointense to the endometrium. Tumor results in diffuse or focal thickening of the endometrium, seen on T2W images as slightly lower signal intensity than the normal endometrium. Tumor is typically heterogeneous and can be differentiated from the inner myometrium or junctional zone which returns low signal. A regular endometrial/myometrial interface indicates tumor confined to the endometrium. In older patients, the junctional zone may be indistinct and the separation between tumor and myometrium difficult. Dynamic contrast administration can aid the detection of tumor invasion as there is early (1 minute) enhancement of the subendometrial zone. Preservation of the junctional zone and subendometrial enhancement exclude deep myometrial involvement. Contrast enhancement at two to three minutes (equilibrium phase) is better for evaluating deep myometrial involvement with maximum difference between tumor and myometrial enhancement. Stage 1B tumors with deep myometrial involvement (>50% depth) will show preservation of a thin stripe of myometrium. Late phase (4–5 minutes) contrast enhancement shows cervical mucosal enhancement and may be useful for evaluating cervical involvement. Tumor extending into the cervical canal does not constitute cervical involvement unless there is some disruption of the low–signal intensity ring of the normal cervical stroma (stage II disease). Stage III disease extends beyond the uterus but is confined to the pelvis. Full thickness involvement of the myometrium and disruption of the normal hypointense uterine serosa seen on T2W imaging identifies stage IIIA disease. The contour of the uterus may also be irregular. The presence of adnexal masses and parametrial involvement are also features of stage IIIA disease. Direct invasion or metastatic deposits to the vagina (stage IIIB) can be identified by loss of low signal intensity in the vaginal wall. Disruption of the low–signal intensity wall of the bladder or rectum by intermediate–signal intensity tumor as well as the presence of a mucosal or intraluminal mass signifies stage IV tumor. Contrast enhancement may help to identify tumor involving the mucosa.
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Mesenchymal Tumors Tumors of mesenchymal origin include carcinosarcomas, endometrial stromal sarcoma, and leiomyosarcoma. Carcinosarcoma is often indistinguishable from endometrioid adenocarcinoma and is staged identically, although it may show more avid enhancement following contrast. Endometrial stromal sarcoma arises in the endometrium and almost invariably shows myometrial involvement. Leiomyosarcoma is thought to arise predominantly de novo, rather than from an underlying leiomyoma, but MR does not provide a reliable means of differentiating malignant from degenerating fibroids. Lymph Node Disease Lymph nodes with a short-axis diameter greater than 8 mm in the pelvis and 10 mm in the retroperitoneum are taken to harbor metastatic disease. However, careful examination of all nodes greater than 5 mm for other signs that may suggest malignancy is suggested. These include round shape, heterogenous signal particularly if returned signal is isointense to the primary tumor, and an irregular margin. The stage and grade of the primary tumor will also affect the probability of nodal disease. Hematogenous Spread Patients with papillary serous and clear cell tumors should have CT imaging of the thorax, abdomen, and pelvis due to the risk of distant disease at presentation. Examination of the upper abdomen with MR in other tumor types will allow assessment of retroperitoneal lymph nodes and evaluation of bone marrow signal. Residual/Recurrent Disease Approximately 15% of patients will experience tumor recurrence. Twenty-five percent recur within six months, and 98% of recurrences occur within three years of treatment. Seventy percent of recurrences are within the vaginal cuff. Patients with high-risk disease treated with radiotherapy tend to recur in an extrapelvic location. Local recurrence at the vaginal vault, or indeed elsewhere within the pelvis, can be identified by the presence of a mass lesion which returns intermediate signal. This can be distinguished from postoperative change which tends to return low signal signifying fibrosis.
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Small tumors can be difficult to identify or differentiate from benign entities such as endometrial hyperplasia, but in practice this is of little importance as primary diagnosis is always histological. Loss of the junctional zone in older patients makes assessment of myometrial invasion difficult. A regular interface between the endometrium and myometrium may help in these cases, as may subendometrial enhancement following contrast administration, although this may only be seen in up to 60% of cases. Large polypoidal tumors can distend the endometrial cavity and thin the myometrium, making both the identification and quantification of myometrial invasion difficult. Coexisting benign myometrial disease such as leiomyomas and adenomyosis compress and distort the adjacent myometrium and may mimic deep tumor invasion. Contrast
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enhancement has been shown to improve accuracy in these situations, and there is emerging evidence that DWI may allow a clear differentiation of these pathologies, as the ADC value of endometrial cancer is reduced in comparison to both normal and benign myometrial conditions. Tumor growing within an area of adenomyosis is not considered to be invading the myometrium, regardless of its position. Endometrial tumors occasionally show a diffuse infiltrative pattern and in this situation can be very difficult to differentiate from normal myometrium even after contrast administration. DWI similarly shows promise in this area. Tumors sited at the cornua can be difficult to stage because of myometrial thinning in this location. Differentiation of tumor prolapsing into the cervical canal and early stromal invasion can be difficult. Assessment of the cervical stroma perpendicular to its long axis is helpful.
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MR can be relatively insensitive in the detection of small peritoneal deposits, but these should be particularly sought out where there is high-grade disease, papillary serous disease, and sarcomatous tumors (leiomyosarcoma, carcinosarcoma, and endometrial sarcoma), which have a greater tendency for peritoneal dissemination. Tumor invading the bowel and bladder can be overstaged if careful attention is not paid to the presence of mucosal involvement, which is required for FIGO stage T4A.
Figure 5.1 Normal uterine zonal anatomy. Sagittal T2WI (A) in a premenopausal patient and (B) in a postmenopausal patient. The zonal anatomy of the uterus is appreciated in the premenopausal patient. There is a central high–signal intensity stripe (asterisk in A), which represents the endometrium and its secretions. The low–signal intensity junctional zone (arrowheads) represents the inner portion of the myometrium and blends inferiorly with the fibromuscular stroma of the cervix. The outer myometrium (arrows) is heterogeneous intermediate and high signal intensity. The junction between the uterine corpus and the cervix is marked by wasting of the contour of the uterus (open arrows). Ascites (A) from an incidental nongynecological cause. In the postmenopausal patient, the endometrial stripe is thin and the entire uterus is of low signal intensity with loss of the junctional anatomy. Abbreviation: B, bladder. Source: Image courtesy of Dr J Hawnaur, Central Manchester and Manchester Children’s Hospital.
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Figure 5.2 T1a N0 stage IA endometrial cancer. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI showing tumor (arrowheads) confined to the endometrium with minimal widening of the endometrial cavity, a smooth interface between the endometrium and the inner myometrium (M) and no sign of myometrial invasion. Source: Image courtesy of Dr J Hawnaur, Central Manchester and Manchester Children’s Hospital.
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Figure 5.3 T1a N0 stage IB—endometrial cancer. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI of an endometrial tumor (asterisk), which demonstrates irregularity of the endometrial/myometrial interface (arrowheads) indicating myometrial invasion confined to the inner half of the myometrium. Incidental note is made of cervical nabothian cysts (arrows in A).
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Figure 5.4 T1a N0 stage IA endometrial cancer—early myometrial invasion. Transaxial T2WI of endometrial tumor (T) invading the inner half of the myometrium along the left lateral aspect with thinning of the junctional zone (arrowheads).
Figure 5.6 T1a N0 stage IA endometrial cancer—inner myometrial involvement. Fundal tumor (T) on this sagittal T2WI is seen to invade the myometrium with only a thin layer of junctional zone confining the tumor to the superficial myometrium (arrows).
Figure 5.5 T1a N0 stage IA endometrial cancer—early myometrial invasion. Sagittal T2WI demonstrates small fundal tumor (arrow) outlined by fluid in the distended endometrial cavity (asterisk) secondary to cervical stenosis related to prior cervical radiotherapy. Zonal anatomy is not well defined in this postmenopausal patient, but the tumor involves the inner myometrium. Source: Image courtesy of Dr Sukumar, South Manchester University Hospital.
Figure 5.7 T1a N0 stage IA endometrial cancer—inner myometrial involvement. Coronal oblique T2WI of left lateral tumor (T) involving most of the inner half of the myometrium with a thin hypointense line of remaining junctional zone (arrowheads). Such tumors can be difficult to stage if the remaining junctional zone is attenuated. Abbreviation: F, fibroids.
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Figure 5.8 T1a N0 stage IA endometrial cancer—inner myometrial invasion confirmed with contrast enhancement. (A) Sagittal T2WI shows intermediate signal endometrial tumor (T) suspicious for outer myometrial involvement (arrows). (B) Sagittal dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) THRIVE image of the same region shows that tumor is confined to the inner half of the myometrium (arrows). Pathology revealed coexistent adenomyosis. Contrast enhancement may be helpful for problem solving, although it is not required for all cases.
Figure 5.9 T1b N0 stage IB endometrial cancer—early deep myometrial involvement. Coronal oblique T2WI perpendicular to the axis of the uterus shows tumor (T) extending into the outer half of the myometrium (arrows). The junctional zone is discontinuous in this area. This plane of imaging may be helpful for examining the tumor/ myometrial interface.
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Figure 5.10 T1b N0 stage IB endometrial cancer—outer myometrial invasion. (A) Sagittal and (B) oblique transaxial T2WI showing a large endometrial tumor (T) invading the outer half of the myometrium on its anterior aspect (arrowheads). Note that the intact posterior myometrium is markedly stretched and thinned by the tumor but that the inner myometrial junctional zone retains its low signal intensity (arrows). Source: Image courtesy of Dr J Hawnaur, Central Manchester and Manchester Children’s Hospital.
Figure 5.11 T1b N0 stage IB endometrial cancer—extensive myometrial invasion. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI show bulky endometrial tumor (T) filling the cavity of a small postmenopausal uterus. A The tumor appears to extend to the serosal surface (arrows) with little myometrium visible. This perception is probably exacerbated by overfilling of the bladder. (C) Transaxial contrastenhanced T1 FS image shows good preservation of the myometrial layer around the tumor, excluding serosal involvement.
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Figure 5.11 (Continued )
Figure 5.12 T1b N0 stage IB endometrial tumor extending to serosal surface. (A) Coronal and (B) parasagittal T2WI show a heterogeneous bulky endometrial tumor (T), which appears to extend through the whole myometrial thickness superiorly (arrows). (C) Sagittal DCE THRIVE image confirms loss of normal myometrial enhancement at this site (open arrows). The contour of the uterus remains smooth as tumor has not penetrated the serosal surface. Abbreviations: F, fibroid; B, bladder.
Figure 5.12 (Continued )
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Figure 5.14 T2 N0 stage II endometrial cancer—carcinosarcoma. Sagittal T2WI shows tumor (T) obstructing the cervix and causing distension of the endometrial cavity (asterisk). Tumor involves the posterior and anterior portions of the cervix (arrows). There is a bladder catheter (C).
Figure 5.13 T2 N0 stage II endometrial cancer involving outer myometrium and cervix. (A) Sagittal T2WI and (B) DCE THRIVE image show carcinosarcoma filling the endometrial cavity with extensive myometrial penetration particularly along the anterior aspect (arrows), with cervical involvement (arrowheads). Normal low signal cervical stroma in A is shown to enhance in B (asterisk). Carcinosarcomas are often bulky tumors at presentation.
Figure 5.15 T3a N0 stage IIIA endometrial cancer with right adnexal involvement. Transaxial T2WI shows tumor (T) replacing most of the uterus. A small amount of normal myometrium is seen anteriorly (asterisk). Tumor has extended directly into the right adnexal region (arrows). The rectum (R) lies close to the tumor but is not involved.
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Figure 5.16 T3a N0 stage IIIA endometrial cancer with extraserosal extension. Sagittal T2WI demonstrates large endometrial tumor (T) arising from the anterior wall and extending beyond the serosal surface with an irregular margin. The cervix is not involved. Tumor comes close to the posterior bladder wall but a thin layer of fat separates the two (arrowhead). Abbreviation: F, fibroid.
Figure 5.17 T3a N0 stage IIIA endometrial cancer. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal oblique T2WI showing a tumor (T) stretching the myometrium and penetrating the outer half along the superolateral aspect where it reaches the serosal surface (arrows) in A. There is cervical involvement (arrowheads) in B.
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Figure 5.18 T3b N0 stage IIIB endometrial cancer with extraserosal, cervical, and parametrial involvement. (A) Transaxial, (B) sagittal, and (C) oblique coronal T2WI. A large tumor (T) filling the endometrial cavity and invading the left adnexal structures (asterisk). A thin rim of stretched myometrium can be seen posteriorly (arrows in A). Trace of ascites (A). There is extraserosal extension (arrows in B) along the superolateral margin of the uterus. There is loss of normal low signal cervical stroma in a right lateral location (arrowheads in C). Tumor extends into the right parametrium (asterisk). (D) Sagittal DCE THRIVE demonstrates bladder wall enhancement and excludes bladder wall involvement which was suspected on the sagittal T2WI (open arrows in B and D). Abbreviation: F, fibroid.
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Figure 5.19 T3b N0 stage IIIB endometrial cancer with vaginal involvement. (A, B) Sagittal and (C) transaxial T2WI demonstrating a large endometrial tumor (T) distending the uterine cavity without evidence of myometrial or cervical invasion. There is a metastasis (M) in the right vagina which demonstrates similar signal intensity to the endometrial tumor proper. There is small volume pelvic ascites (A). Abbreviation: F, fibroid. Source: Image courtesy of Dr J Hawnaur, Central Manchester and Manchester Children’s Hospital.
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Figure 5.20 T4 N1 M1 stage IVB papillary serous endometrial tumor with bladder, vaginal, and omental involvement. (A) Sagittal, (B, C) transaxial T2WI. In A there is grossly abnormal uterus with distended endometrial cavity and blurring of zonal anatomy. Extensive infiltration of the cervix (C) and upper vagina is demonstrated (arrowheads). There is obliteration of the fat plane between the tumor and bladder (arrows) and tumor extension into the bladder lumen (open arrows). Gas within the bladder (asterisk) denotes fistulation. (B) There is left adnexal involvement (arrows) and right iliac lymph node metastasis (N). (C) At the level of the vagina, there is confirmed vaginal infiltration with circumferential wall thickening (V) and tumor involving the posterior bladder wall (crossed arrows). (D) Transaxial T2WI shows left-sided omental infiltration (arrow) and peritoneal disease (arrowhead). Enlarged bilateral iliac nodes are also seen (N). Patients with papillary serous tumors are at high risk of peritoneal dissemination and should have preoperative CT for staging and omentectomy at surgery.
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Figure 5.21 Central recurrence of endometrial cancer. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI demonstrating a large central pelvic tumor recurrence (T). The mass, which is arising from the vaginal vault, extends to involve the rectosigmoid colon (arrows) without extension to the pelvic sidewall. One small bowel loop (S) is seen to be adherent to the superior surface of the mass in B. The posterosuperior bladder wall is abnormal (arrowheads) due to small volume tumor infiltrating the remnant of the uterovesical ligament (asterisk). Source: Image courtesy of Dr Carrington, Christie Hospital.
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Figure 5.22 Recurrence of endometrial cancer. (A) Sagittal, (B) transaxial, and (C) coronal T2WI in a patient with lower vaginal recurrent tumor (T) extending up the anterior wall (asterisk). There is anterior extension to encircle the urethra (U) and infiltration of right levator ani (arrowheads) in B and C. Tumor reaches the right lateral pelvic sidewall (arrows) and posteriorly displaces but does not involve the anal canal (A). Abbreviations: B, bladder; U, urethra. Source: Image courtesy of Dr Bernadette M. Carrington, Christie Hospital. (Continued )
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Figure 5.22 (Continued )
Figure 5.23 T1b stage IB—adenosarcoma. (A) Sagittal T2WI, (B) transverse T2WI, and (C) sagittal DCE THRIVE images show a large prolapsing polypoidal tumor (T), which fills the endometrial cavity and prolapses through the cervix (C) but shows no evidence of stromal invasion. In these images, the junctional zone (arrows) appears preserved, but histologically there was focal inner myometrial penetration. Late-phase contrast images in C demonstrate enhancement of the cervical epithelium (arrowheads) and vaginal wall (open arrows). There is no contrast enhancement of the prolapsed tumor secondary to infarction. Trace of ascites (A).
Figure 5.23 (Continued )
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Figure 5.24 T1a N0 stage IA leiomyosarcoma. Transaxial T2WI demonstrates atypical appearing fibroid with a cystic component at the isthmus (T). Right hematosalpinx (Hs) from known endometriosis. Fluid within upper endocervix (asterisk). Cervical stroma (arrowheads). A diagnosis of leiomyosarcoma was made at surgery.
Figure 5.26 Nabothian cysts mimicking cervical invasion. (A) Coronal and (B) transaxial T2WI with tumor extending into the cervical canal (T). Multiple small nabothian cysts (arrowheads) should not be confused with tumor invading the cervical stroma.
Figure 5.25 T1b N1 stage IIIC leiomyosarcoma. Transaxial T2WI in patient with a rapidly enlarging abdominal mass shows a heterogeneous myometrial tumor (T) with a thin rim of surrounding myometrium (arrows) and a metastatic right common iliac lymph node (N) of similar signal intensity to the tumor and demonstrating extranodal extension medially.
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Figure 5.28 Adenomyosis and endometrial cancer. (A, B) sagittal and parasagittal T2WI of endometrial cancer (T) with coexistent adenomyosis (asterisk). The border between the adenomyosis and the tumor, and the depth of myometrial penetration is difficult to identify. (C) Sagittal DCE THRIVE contrast imaging is not helpful as the enhancement of tumor and adenomyosis is similar. Tumor in this case was thought radiologically to extend to the outer half (arrow), and this was confirmed histologically. DWI may be of use in this situation.
Figure 5.27 Pseudomyometrial invasion due to fibroids. (A) Coronal oblique T2WI of tumor (T) that appears to extend into the outer myometrium with an area of increased signal adjacent (asterisk) to a fibroid (F). (B) Sagittal DCE THRIVE image shows normal myometrial enhancement (asterisk) with tumor (T) confined to the inner half of the myometrium.
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Figure 5.29 Pseudoinvasion of cervix by endometrial cancer. (A) Sagittal T2WI and (B) coronal oblique T2WI of endometrial cancer (T) involving the outer myometrium along the fundal aspect (arrows), with adenomyosis adjacent (asterisk). Tumor extends directly into the upper endocervical canal (arrowheads) but in B there is preservation of circumferential low signal cervical stroma. Pathological examination showed tumor within the endocervical canal indicating the cervix is not involved. Figure 5.28 (Continued )
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FURTHER READING Endometrial Cancer. Diagnosis and pre-treatment staging and Endometrial Cancer Treatment. In: Guidance on Commissioning Cancer Services. Improving Outcomes in Gynaecological Cancers. The Research Evidence. NHS Executive, Department of Health publication, 1999. Review of research evidence for current management of endometrial cancer. Kinkel K, Forstner R, Danza FM, et al. Staging of endometrial cancer with MRI: guidelines of the European Society of Urogenital Imaging. Eur Radiol 2009; 19:1565–1574. Recent guidelines describing imaging technique. Published before new FIGO staging. Kinkel K, Kaji Y, Yu KK, et al. Radiologic staging in patients with endometrial cancer: a meta-analysis. Radiology 1999; 212:711–718. Meta-analysis of performance of MR, CT and ultrasound in the assessment of endometrial tumors.
May K, Bryant A, Dickinson HO, et al. Lymphadenectomy for the management of endometrial cancer (review). The Cochrane Library 2010; (1):1–42. Current Cochrane review of published randomized trials investigating the benefit of lymph node resection. Sala E, Wakely S, Senior E, et al. MRI of malignant neoplasms of the uterine corpus and cervix. Am J Roentgenol 2007; 188:1577–1587. Good recent overview, particularly of pitfalls. Takeuchi M, Matuzaki K, Nishitani H. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of endometrial cancer: differentiation from benign endometrial lesions and preoperative assessment of myometrial invasion. Acta Radiol 2009; 50(8):947–953. Description of potential additional use of DWI in staging endometrial tumors and differentiating from benign pathology such as adenomyosis.
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6 Ovarian cancer Soo Y. S. K. Mak and Prakash Manoharan
BACKGROUND INFORMATION Epidemiology Ovarian carcinoma is the fifth most common cancer and fourth most common cause of cancer deaths in women in the Western world. There are approximately 7000 new cases per year in the United Kingdom and 20,000 new cases in the United States. Ovarian cancer accounts for 4% of all female cancers with a lifetime risk of developing this disease of 1 in 50. The peak incidence is over 65 years with about 80% diagnosed in women older than 50. There are several factors implicated in the etiology of ovarian cancer, including early menarche, nulliparity by 35 years, late menopause, taking hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for more than five years, smoking, endometriosis, obesity, and increasing age. The strongest risk factor is a family history of ovarian cancer. Risk is reduced by breast feeding, having a first child by 25 years of age, use of oral contraception, and sterilization by tubal ligation. Mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes and the autosomal dominant HNPCC/Lynch2 syndrome (colonic, endometrial, breast, and ovarian cancer) are associated with increased risk of ovarian cancer although only about 10% of ovarian cancer patients carry these genes. More recently, a genetic single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) has been located on chromosome 9. Women with variation of this gene have a 40% increase in their lifetime risk of developing ovarian cancer. At present, screening for ovarian cancer is on a clinical trial basis only. Higher-risk women can be offered screening but they need counseling about the efficacy and false positive rates of such tests.
Histopathology Ovarian tumors are classified according to their tissue of origin (Fig. 6.1). Epithelial tumors account for almost 90% of malignant ovarian cancers. They arise from the surface epithelium or serosa of the ovary. The commonest are serous, followed by mucinous and endometrioid tumors. Histological grading is a more important prognostic indicator than cell type in early stage disease. Borderline tumors, also called epithelial ovarian tumors of low malignant potential (LMP), show some features of malignancy such as irregular architecture, nuclear stratification and polymorphism, and mitotic activity but no invasion into the
stroma. These demonstrate slow progression and occur in younger patients typically ranging from 39 to 45 years of age. Sex cord stromal tumors account for 5% to 10% of all ovarian tumors. They can differentiate into ovarian, testicular, or stromal tumors and often secrete steroids. Granulosa stromal cell tumors are the commonest type. About 1% of sex cord stromal tumors remain undifferentiated. Germ cell tumors arise from primitive ovarian germ cells and are commonest in women in their twenties. Their rapid growth often leads to presentations with pain due to torsion, hemorrhage, or necrosis. Metastases account for 5% to 10% of ovarian tumors, commonly from breast, endometrium, and gastrointestinal malignancy. Ovarian carcinomas are also graded histologically from 1 (well differentiated) to 4 (poorly differentiated) with grade 4 tumors having the poorest outcome.
Patterns of Tumor Spread Direct spread of ovarian cancer occurs along the fallopian tube to involve the broad ligaments and uterus. Direct invasion of the rectum, sigmoid colon, bladder, and pelvic sidewalls also occurs in late disease. Lymphatic spread occurs along the path of the ovarian vessels, on the right to precaval and lateral caval lymph nodes and on the left to para-aortic lymph nodes at the level of the renal hilum. Broad ligament lymphatics drain to the obturator, common and external iliac nodes and round ligament lymphatics drain to the inguinal nodes. Transcoelomic spread occurs by tumor surface shedding and intraperitoneal dissemination. Common sites of seeding include the undersurface of the diaphragm (preferentially on the right due to peritoneal fluid flow), the omentum, serosa of small and large bowel, the liver surface, and the pelvic cul-de-sac. Hematogenous spread occurs as a late feature in advanced disease to the liver, lungs, pleura, kidneys, and bone.
Prognostic Indicators l
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Tumor staging at diagnosis is important for prognosis as most of the improvement in survival has been in T1 or T2 disease. Currently, five-year survival for T1 disease at presentation is 73% and for T4 disease approximately 15%. Histological grade is also important, with high-grade tumors having a poorer prognosis. Histological cell type
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Table 6.1 Epithelial Tumors: Make Up 90% of All Malignant Ovarian Tumors and 60% to 90% of All Ovarian Tumors Brenner
Clear cell
Mucinous
Endometrioid
Serous
Postmenopausal
Postmenopausal
Postmenopausal
Postmenopausal
Aggression
Any age. 50% over 50 yr Rarely malignant 6%
Incidence
1–2% of malignant tumors Solid and homogeneous. Occasionally cystic. Usually 1.0–2.0 cm. Extensive calcification is common
80% of benign 10% of malignant 5% of benign 20% of malignant 10% of malignant tumors Multilocular cysts containing hemorrhage or cellular debris
Mostly malignant
Bilateral
Mostly malignant, but 75% stage I 40%
60% of benign 25% of malignant 25% of benign 65% of malignant 20–50% of malignant tumors Predominantly cystic. Malignant lesions have more solid components. Psammoma bodies in 30%
Age
Typical features
6% of malignant tumors Usually unilocular cyst with few mural nodules protruding into the lumen
40% 20% of malignant tumors Variable cystic/solid components. Associated with endometrial hyperplasia and carcinoma
Table 6.2 Sex Cord Stromal Tumors: 5% of All Ovarian Malignancies Fibroma
Sertoli-Leydig cell
Granulosa cell
Thecoma
Age
40–50 yr
Reproductive years
Reproductive years
Aggression
Benign
Bilateral Incidence
Unilateral Rare Solid. Associated with pleural effusion. (Meig’s syndrome)
Unilateral in >95% 5–10% of all ovarian malignancies Multicystic. May be hemorrhagic or necrotic. Can secrete estrogen and is associated with abnormal vaginal bleeding, hyperplasia and carcinoma
Unilateral Commonest
Typical features
Depends on the degree of differentiation. 5-yr survival is 70% Unilateral <0.2% of all ovarian malignancies Can be solid or cystic. Synthesize androgens resulting in masculinization
Any age, but commonest in postmenopausal years Malignant potential increases with size. 5-yr survival is 90%
85% to 90% synthesize steroid.
Benign
Solid. Produces estrogen and associated with abnormal vaginal bleeding, endometrial hyperplasia, and carcinoma
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Table 6.3 Germ Cell Tumors: 15% to 20% of All Ovarian Malignancies Teratoma Dysgerminoma
Mature
Immature
Monodermal
Yolk sac
Choriocarcinoma
Age
20–30 yr
Any age
10–20 yr
Any age
Under 30 yr
Under 20 yr
Aggression
Malignant. 90% 5-yr survival
Benign
Malignant. 80–90% 5-yr survival
Variable
Malignant. 2-yr survival 60–70%
Malignant. Poor prognosis
Bilateral
10%
Usually unilateral
Usually unilateral
Usually unilateral
Unilateral
Unilateral
Incidence
Commonest malignant germ cell. 2–5% of primary ovarian malignancies
Commonest ovarian neoplasm
<1% of ovarian malignancies
Rare
1% of ovarian tumors. 2nd commonest malignant germ cell tumor
Very rare
Typical features
Solid with cystic areas secondary to necrosis or hemorrhage
Fat-fluid or hairfluid levels. Calcification, bone and teeth
Predominantly solid. Contain fetal/embryonal tissue
Solid. Thyroid tissue (struma ovarii) or carcinoid tissue
Cystic or solid. Areas of hemorrhage
Usually solid. Often a component of other malignant germ cell tumor
Most common 10 to 20 years; 60% to 70% stage I at diagnosis.
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is not a prognostic factor but some tumors, for example, mucinous carcinomas, are often of lower grade compared to serous cystadenocarcinoma. The size, volume, and number of residual tumor deposits after completion of the initial staging laparotomy have prognostic significance. Initial optimal debulking with residual disease less than 1.5 to 2.0 cm in diameter has a better outcome because of improved chemotherapy efficacy.
Tumor Markers The tumor marker cancer/carbohydrate antigen-125 (CA-125) is raised in 80% to 85% of patients with ovarian cancer but in only 50% of patients with Stage 1 disease. It is not exclusive to ovarian cancer being raised in 1% of healthy individuals and in 40% of patients with advanced intra-abdominal nonovarian malignancy and other nonmalignant conditions such as liver cirrhosis, pancreatitis, endometriosis, pelvic inflammatory disease, and pregnancy. Therefore, it is most useful as a baseline marker for the subsequent monitoring of response to chemotherapy and can predict recurrence preceding positive imaging findings. Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) may be raised in ovarian mucinous cystadenocarcinoma. a-Fetoprotein (AFP) and human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) are elevated in many germ cell tumors.
Treatment Surgery If eligible for surgery (FIGO I and IIA), patients will undergo primary staging and cytoreductive laparotomy including total abdominal hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, infracolic omentectomy, with or without an appendicectomy, cytological analysis of ascites and peritoneal washings, biopsies of peritoneum and diaphragm, selective pelvic and para-aortic node sampling, and removal of all macroscopic tumors, since several studies have shown this results in prolonged survival. In more advanced disease (IIB to IIIC), optimal cytoreduction is
still performed to reduce residual tumor deposits to less than 2.0 cm in diameter and preferably less than 1.0 cm. The outlook is poorer if bowel surgery is needed. If initial maximum cytoreduction is not possible, interval debulking is considered in patients responding to chemotherapy or showing stable disease. In unresectable or stage IV disease, there is still benefit from chemotherapy followed by debulking surgery. Prophylactic oophorectomy may reduce the risk of developing ovarian carcinoma in patients with genetic mutations predisposing to gynecological and breast cancer. This is best performed before 40 years of age but may have significant psychological implications. Chemotherapy In early-stage disease (I and IIA), in women with no residual disease after surgery identifiable on CT, combination chemotherapy with carboplatin and paclitaxol has been shown to improve overall survival and disease-free survival. In more advanced disease, there is no firm proof of improvement in survival, but if chemotherapy is considered, similar combination chemotherapy is offered. In recurrent disease, there are other chemotherapy options with overall response rates of 15% to 30%. If relapse occurs within six months of chemotherapy, disease is considered resistant and further treatment has to be individually considered. If relapse is more than six months from completion of last therapy, further combination chemotherapy can be administered. Radiotherapy Usually, radiotherapy has a limited palliative role for symptom control, and occasionally, radical radiotherapy can be used to treat small volume localized but unresectable relapse.
MR IMAGING OF OVARIAN CANCER Technique The use of a negative-bowel contrast agent such as 2% barium allows distension of bowel and improves detection of enhancing serosal deposits. Antiperistaltic agents such as glucagon or
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Table 6.4 FIGO and TNM Classification of Ovarian Carcinoma TNM stage
FIGO stage
TX T0 TI TIa
I IA
TIb
IB
TIc
IC
T2 T2a
II IIA
T2b T2c T3
IIB IIC III
T3a T3b T3c NX N0 NI M0 MI
IIIA IIIB IIIC
IIIC IV
Extent of disease Cannot assess primary tumor No evidence of primary tumor Tumor restricted to one or both ovaries Tumor limited to one ovary with capsule intact and no tumor on ovarian surface. No malignant cells in ascites or peritoneal washings Tumor restricted to both ovaries with capsules intact and no tumor on ovarian surfaces. No malignant cells in ascites or peritoneal washings Tumor restricted to one or both ovaries with any of the following: ruptured capsule, tumor on ovarian surface, malignant cells in ascites or peritoneal washings Tumor involves one or both ovaries with pelvic extension Extension and/or implants on the uterus and/or tubes; no malignant cells in ascites or peritoneal washings Extension to and/or implants on other pelvic tissues. No malignant cells in ascites or peritoneal washings Pelvic extension and/or implants (2a or 2b); malignant cells in ascites or peritoneal washings Tumor involves one or both ovaries with microscopically confirmed peritoneal metastasis outside the pelvis. Microscopic peritoneal metastasis beyond pelvis. No macroscopic tumor Macroscopic peritoneal metastasis beyond pelvis 2.0 cm in greatest dimension Peritoneal metastasis beyond pelvis 2.0 cm in greatest dimension and/or regional nodal metastasis Cannot assess regional lymph nodes No regional nodal metastasis Regional nodal metastasis No distant metastasis Distant metastasis (excluding peritoneal metastasis)
Abbreviations: FIGO, Federation Internationale Gynecologie et Oncologie; TNM, Tumor Node Metastasis.
hyoscine butylbromide (Buscopan1) can help detect serosal and peritoneal implants by reducing bowel movement artifact. A standard technique is applied for imaging the abdomen and pelvis (see chap. 2). T1WI and T2WI are both necessary for characterizing ovarian masses. High-resolution T2WI should be performed through the pelvis in at least two planes perpendicular to each other. T1WI through the abdomen is important for assessing retroperitoneal nodes and the presence of omental, serosal, and peritoneal implants. Within the pelvis, T1WI is useful for detecting high signal within ovarian lesions which could indicate fat or blood products. Fat saturation T1WI and sometimes FISP can confirm the presence of fat by demonstrating signal drop out. Post contrast fat-suppressed T1W images are useful to further characterize the internal architecture of cystic ovarian lesions and improve detection of peritoneal and omental implants. If available, breath-hold axial fast multiplanar Spoiled Gradient Recalled Echo images with fat suppression both before and after contrast can reduce movement artifact and scan times. Diffusion-weighted images (DWI) can be useful to demonstrate restricted diffusion with high b values within peritoneal, serosal, and lymph node metastases. Because of the considerable overlap of mean and lowest ADC values, ADC mapping is less useful and hence DWI is of less value differentiating between benign and malignant ovarian masses.
Current Indications Surgery remains the gold standard for staging and may be curative for early-stage patients. CT with oral and intravenous contrast is recommended for preoperative staging of ovarian carcinoma, in assessing postoperative residual tumor prior to chemotherapy and in monitoring chemotherapy response.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is used when there is a contraindication to iodinated contrast agents, in pregnancy, and in those in whom CT findings are inconclusive. In local recurrence and in advanced cases where surgery is planned, MRI is most useful for assessing the extent of pelvic spread, particularly involvement of pelvic organs and the pelvic sidewall. MRI is also used to further characterize indeterminate ovarian masses and to identify common benign coexisting conditions such as fibroids, dermoid cysts, and endometriomas.
Staging Accuracy Compared to Other Imaging Techniques MRI has an accuracy of 60% to 93% in distinguishing benign from malignant lesions, similar to CT. CT and MR have a similar sensitivity of 85% to 93% and specificity of 91% to 96% for detecting peritoneal metastasis more than 1.0 cm in size. Both CT and MRI can understage disease due to nondetection of small tumor implants less than 1.0 cm. Abdominal disease is better assessed on CT, in particular disease within the mesentery, bowel wall implants, omental and peritoneal involvement, and calcific deposits. CT is useful in detecting disease within surgical “blind spots,” for example, the posterior right lobe of the liver and the subhepatic region, and in detecting lymph node metastases above the celiac axis, which can preclude complete cytoreduction. MR has similar sensitivity to CT in detecting retroperitoneal nodes. In assessing pelvic disease, MR is more sensitive than CT for evaluating the spread of ovarian carcinoma into adjacent organs such as the rectum and bladder as well as local extension to the pelvic sidewall in advanced disease and for delineating local recurrence. Both CT and MR can be used to identify patients who cannot have optimal debulking and need to be referred for neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
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Ultrasound is not routinely used for staging ovarian cancer as it is less accurate than MR and CT at detecting peritoneal and lymph node metastasis. PET-CT is also not routinely used to stage ovarian cancer due to poor sensitivity for detecting peritoneal spread, in particular lesions less than 1.0 cm in size. Some tumors such as adenocarcinoma and inflammatory lesions that are benign can be false positive on PET-CT. Borderline tumors and early carcinoma can be false negative on PET-CT. Functional MR imaging techniques appear promising. Early studies of dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) suggest malignant lesions can be distinguished by earlier, more rapid, and greater enhancement compared to benign lesions. As discussed earlier, DWI is less useful in differentiating between benign and malignant ovarian tumors but more useful for characterizing lymph nodes and evaluating peritoneal dissemination although false-negative nodes can occur in cystic, necrotic, and mucinous tumors. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy has the potential for in vivo studies, but currently there is no published data on therapy-related metabolite changes in ovarian and peritoneal lesions.
Serosal bowel deposits are seen as plaques or nodules on the bowel surface, which have the same signal characteristics as peritoneal deposits, usually also involving adjacent peritoneum and mesentery. Lymph Node Disease Features suggestive of metastatic nodes include a short-axis diameter greater than 1.0 cm, rounded shape, and internal signal similar to the solid component of the tumor. Hematogenous Spread Although rare, the liver and bone marrow should be scrutinized. If bone metastases are detected, the possibility of lobular breast carcinoma with peritoneal metastasis, or a second primary, needs to be considered.
Pitfalls of MRI l
Imaging Features Primary Tumor Features suggestive of malignancy include bilaterality, tumor size larger than 6 cm, predominantly solid masses, cystic tumors with vegetations, and solid lesions with necrosis. Secondary malignant features include ascites, pelvic organ and peritoneal involvement, peritoneal disease, and enlarged nodes. Signal characteristics of lesions depend on the extent and type of solid components and the presence of cystic components, fat, or hemorrhage. On T2WI, soft tissue components are usually heterogeneous intermediate to low signal, cystic components show variable high signal depending on the protein content, and benign features such as smooth muscle and fibrotic tissue are of uniform low signal. Local Invasion Uterine invasion is diagnosed by uterine contour distortion, an irregular interface between the tumor and myometrium, and increased signal intensity of the involved myometrium on T2WI. Colon invasion is diagnosed when there is direct tumor extension to the bowel, encasement of the sigmoid colon, and loss of the normal connective tissue plane between a solid component of the tumor and the wall of colon or bladder. Pelvic sidewall invasion is suspected when tumor extends to within 3 mm of the pelvic sidewall or when the iliac vessels are surrounded or distorted. Transcoelomic Spread Peritoneal deposits are seen as nodular or plaque-like lesions adjacent to or projecting from the peritoneal surfaces. They show high signal intensity on T2WI and enhance following intravenous gadolinium administration. Omental deposits can be infiltrative, nodular, or cakelike soft tissue. They are of intermediate signal intensity on T1WI and T2WI, located within the usually fatty omentum, and show enhancement after intravenous gadolinium administration.
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Hydrosalpinx and peritoneal inclusion cysts can mimic cystic ovarian masses. A hydrosalpinx is a characteristic thin walled convoluted tubular structure best seen on T2W images. Peritoneal inclusion cysts have an extraovarian location remote from the peritoneal cul-de-sac, the expected location of ascites. They may entrap the ovary and distort the ovarian contour but do not penetrate the ovarian parenchyma. Polycystic ovarian disease can be the cause of enlarged ovaries. They have characteristically distributed multiple small peripheral cysts and a hypertrophied low–signal intensity central stroma. Malignant epithelial tumors do not have specific MR imaging features. Certain features suggestive of malignancy, for example, a thick wall and septations, can also be seen in endometriosis, abscess, peritoneal cysts, and benign neoplasms. Clots or debris in hemorrhagic cysts can be mistaken for papillary projections, this can be resolved with intravenous gadolinium administration as genuine papillary projections will enhance. A metastasis to the ovary presenting as a solid or partially cystic mass can be mistaken for primary ovarian carcinoma. Mucin-secreting carcinomas from stomach or colonproducing bilateral ovarian metastasis are known as Krukenberg tumors. Peritoneal and bowel wall inflammation may enhance and mimic peritoneal or serosal tumor following intravenous contrast injection. In acute bowel obstruction, it may be difficult to differentiate serosal disease from increased intestinal and mesenteric enhancement. Poor sensitivity for detecting peritoneal deposits less than 1.0 cm. Although this is improved with contrast-enhanced MRI, the majority of small deposits are not seen. Calcified deposits can be difficult to detect on MRI. Normal appearances following surgery can be misleading. A hematoma within the medial end of the cut round ligament or a normal but asymmetrical postoperative vaginal vault can be confused with residual disease. Peritoneal thickening and enhancement at the site of the abdominal incision, within adhesions, and asymmetry in the rectus sheath can be confusing and may mimic peritoneal disease deposits.
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Figure 6.1 Schematic drawing showing sites of origin of ovarian cancer.
Figure 6.2 Normal ovarian anatomy. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) T2WI showing normal follicular cysts in the right ovary. They appear thin walled and of low signal intensity on T1WI and high signal on T2WI (arrows). The ovarian stroma is of low signal intensity on T1WI and intermediate signal on T2WI (arrowhead). There is a distended endometrial cavity (E) and prominent parametrial vessels (crossed arrows) due to the patient being post partum. (C) Transaxial T2WI and (D) post contrast fat-saturated T1WI in a different patient showing avid enhancement of the ovarian stroma (arrows) with nonenhancement of follicular cysts. There is an incidental neurofibroma (Nf) in the subcutaneous tissue overlying the sacrum.
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Figure 6.3 Postmenopausal ovaries. Transaxial T2WI showing normal appearances of the ovaries in a postmenopausal woman. They are of small volume and reduced signal intensity (arrowheads), as the ovarian stroma is replaced by fibrous tissue. Note the round ligament lying in close proximity to the ovaries (arrows). The left ovary contains a persistent small follicular cyst (Cy). The left ureter (U) is dilated due to a small obstructing mass more distally in the pelvis (not shown).
Figure 6.4 T1a ovarian cancer. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI showing a right-ovarian endometrioid carcinoma. There is a cystic mass (T) with an irregularly thickened wall (arrows) and vegetations (arrowheads). The outer surface of the mass is smooth (open arrowheads) indicating an intact ovarian capsule. Note the primary endometrial cancer (E). Of the patients, 15% to 20% with endometrioid ovarian carcinomas also have synchronous endometrial cancer.
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Figure 6.5 T1b ovarian cancer. Coronal T2WI showing bilateral ovarian cystic tumors (T). The capsules of the ovaries are intact (arrows). A frequent problem is how to distinguish cystic ovarian tumors from normal ovaries with cysts. The presence of other malignant features such as ascites, pelvic organ and peritoneal involvement, peritoneal disease, and enlarged nodes often improves the confidence of diagnosis. Note the absence of ascites. Abbreviation: U, uterus.
Figure 6.6 (Continued ) Figure 6.6 T1c ovarian cancer. (A) Transaxial, (B) coronal, and (C) sagittal T2WI showing bilateral mixed composition ovarian masses (T). The extent and type of solid components, cystic components, and sometimes the presence of fat or hemorrhage contribute to heterogeneous mixed intermediate to high signal intensity within a mass. The lesions are lobulated and incompletely encapsulated, with tumor on the medial surface of the right-sided mass and on the superior and inferior ovarian surfaces of the leftsided mass (arrows). There is a small volume of ascites (arrowheads).
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Figure 6.7 Ovarian cancer involving the uterus. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T2WI showing a large mixed composition tumor (T) filling the pelvis. The uterus (U) is displaced anteriorly and to the right and is inseparable from the tumor (arrows). The mass effect has resulted in bilateral hydronephrosis (H). Ureter (asterisk).
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Figure 6.8 T2b ovarian cancer involving the rectum and abdominal wall muscles. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI showing a locally extensive ovarian tumor (T), which has spread posteriorly to penetrate the perirectal fascia and fat and adhere to the rectum (arrows). Anteriorly, tumor extends to abut and infiltrate the posterior surface of the rectus sheath (arrowheads) and involve the bladder (B). Note the fluid-fluid level in part of the tumor mass representing layering of proteinaceous secretions and hemorrhage (open arrowheads) and the absence of ascites.
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Figure 6.9 T2c ovarian cancer with a pelvic peritoneal implant. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI show a mixed signal intensity complex ovarian tumor (T) with a peritoneal implant in the pouch of Douglas (arrow in B). The ovarian mass extends to and is inseparable from the adjacent left external iliac vessels (arrowheads in A). Intramural and subserosal fibroids (F) are noted. Partial volume averaging from peristalsing bowel is noted in A (asterisk).
Figure 6.10 T3a psammomatous serous adenocarcinoma. (A) Transaxial T2WI and (B) T1W fat-saturated image demonstrate very low signal intensity material (arrow) within a right ovarian mass. This is due to calcification confirmed on CT (C). Psammoma bodies which are round collections of calcification are characteristic for serous tumor but may be seen in other cancers such as papillary thyroid carcinoma and in some benign conditions. Adjacent to the main mass is a further small high signal lesion (arrowhead in A and B) likely hemorrhage or proteinaceous material. At surgery macroscopic disease remained confined to the pelvis, but there were microscopic peritoneal implants outside the pelvis.
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Figure 6.11 T3b ovarian cancer. (A) Coronal T1WI and (B) transaxial T2WI showing a mixed solid and cystic central pelvic tumor mass (T). There are metastatic deposits (arrowheads) in the omentum. Note the presence of ascites (arrows) and an intermediate signal right pelvic metastatic node (N).
Figure 6.12 T3c ovarian cancer. (A) Coronal T1WI, (B) coronal T2W fat-saturated image, and (C) coronal post contrast T1W fatsaturated image demonstrate bilateral complex ovarian tumors (T) with a large omental cake within the upper abdomen (M), demonstrating a heterogeneous appearance on T2WI and avid enhancement. (Continued )
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Figure 6.12 (Continued )
Figure 6.13 N1 ovarian cancer with DWI. (A) Coronal T1WI, (B) transaxial fat-suppressed T2WI, (C) DWI (b 800), and (D) ADC. There is a cluster of low signal intensity left para-aortic nodes (N) which demonstrate high signal in B. These nodes demonstrate restricted diffusion with a low ADC.
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Figure 6.14 M1 Ovarian cancer. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) T2WI in a patient with advanced ovarian carcinoma. There is a metastasis in the right lobe of liver (M) and within a porta hepatis node (N) in A. There is a simple cyst (C) in the right kidney and left hydronephrosis (H) in A due to distal ureteric obstruction from retroperitoneal lymph nodes (not shown). In B, a plaque of recurrent tumor (T) is seen encasing the rectum and there are intermediate signal metastatic nodes (N) in the external iliac and right inguinal regions.
Figure 6.13 (Continued )
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Figure 6.15 Polycystic ovary disease. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T2WI showing enlarged ovaries with characteristically distributed multiple small peripheral cysts (arrowheads) with a hypertrophied low–signal intensity central stroma (arrow). This condition should be recognized and distinguished from the normal appearances of follicular cysts.
Figure 6.16 Hydrosalpinx. (A) Transaxial, (B) coronal, and (C, D) parasagittal T2WI showing bilateral hydrosalpinges. On initial inspection, the coronal and transaxial images give the erroneous impression of bilateral adnexal cystic masses. Review of the parasagittal images confirms the presence of dilated fallopian tubes (F) represented as thin-walled convoluted tubular structures (arrows) with mucosal folds (arrowheads).
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Figure 6.17 Pelvic inclusion cyst. Transaxial T2WI through the pelvis in a woman who had undergone previous right salpingooophorectomy for a dermoid and a carcinoid tumor. The left ovary (arrow) is surrounded on both sides by fluid-filled locules (F). They are derived from nonneoplastic mesothelial proliferation caused by retained ovarian fluid in patients with peritoneal adhesions. The extraovarian location of the cysts differentiates them from benign or malignant ovarian tumors. The shape and location remote from the peritoneal cul-de-sac differentiate the cyst from ascites.
Figure 6.16 (Continued )
Figure 6.18 Postoperative swelling of round ligaments. Transaxial T2WI demonstrating bilateral bulbous swelling (arrowheads) of the proximal ends of the transected round ligaments (arrows) four months following total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy for ovarian cancer. These changes usually resolve by 12 months after surgery. They should be recognized and differentiated from tumor masses. Note the residual tumor (T) arising from the vaginal vault and involving the rectum (R) with several involved perirectal lymph nodes (open arrowheads).
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Figure 6.19 Endometrioma. (A) Transaxial T1WI fat-saturated image and (B) transaxial T2WI. This patient had a previous hysterectomy, which showed endometriosis. There is a lesion in the left adnexa (E), which demonstrates high signal intensity in A and diffuse intermediate signal in B in keeping with an endometrioma. Note the uniform low signal of the fibrous capsule (arrow) with a small nodule of very low signal (arrowhead) due to hemoglobin breakdown products. In some instances, a fluid-fluid level can be seen with layering of the hypointense-dependent portion on T2WI reflecting the chronology of the breakdown of blood products. The pelvic colon appears tethered and angulated related to endometriosis (crossed arrows).
Figure 6.20 Dermoid. (A) Transaxial T1WI, (B) T2WI, and (C) T1W fat-saturated image. There is a well-defined lesion in the left pelvis, which shows fat-fluid layering. The superior component (arrow) demonstrates high signal intensity in A and B and signal drop out in C in keeping with fat. Within the lesion there is a smaller round Rokitansky nodule (R) showing intermediate signal in A and B with an ill-defined interface with the fat (arrowhead) in A suggestive of hair components within the dermoid.
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Figure 6.21 Resolving hematoma. (A) Coronal T1WI and (B) transaxial T2WI. There is a well-defined high–signal intensity left adnexal lesion (H) in A, containing intermediate signal within it (arrow in B). (C) Coronal T1WI and (D) transaxial T2WI five months later. The lesion is smaller with resorption of the internal material. This is in keeping with a simple hemorrhagic cyst with resolution of previous clot. Note the complex internal appearance with blood breakdown products which can mimic tumor. Follow-up imaging helps to confirm the benign nature of these findings.
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Figure 6.22 Benign cystadenoma in a patient who had a prior hysterectomy. Transaxial T2WI. There is a left adnexal cyst (C) arising from the retained left ovary containing thin-walled septae (arrows) anteriorly in keeping with a benign cyst adenoma. There is also a simple cyst within the right ovary (arrowhead).
Figure 6.23 Ovarian carcinoma on PET-CT. (A) Transaxial T2WI demonstrates an intermediate signal intensity soft tissue mass within the left ovary (T), which shows increased FDG activity on PET-CT (arrow in B) consistent with a malignant lesion. This was later confirmed to be an ovarian adenocarcinoma. Abbreviations: FDG, fluorodeoxyglucose; PET-CT, positron emission tomography-computed tomography.
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Figure 6.24 Recurrent ovarian carcinoma—peritoneal spread. (A, B) Transaxial and (C) coronal T2WI through the pelvis showing recurrent tumor (T) at the vaginal vault. Tumor nodules extend along the left peritoneum (arrow). Bilateral enlarged pelvic lymph nodes (N) containing speckled intermediate signal intensity identical to the recurrent tumor consistent with metastasis. The peritoneum is generally thickened due to previous surgery. Round ligament (arrowheads in B).
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Figure 6.25 Recurrent ovarian teratoma. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) T2WI through the pelvis. There is a fat-containing lesion in the right adnexa (arrow) with high signal intensity on T1WI and intermediate signal on T2WI in keeping with an ovarian teratoma. Multilobulated heterogeneous signal intensity recurrent tumor (T) is also seen in the left pelvis abutting the cervix, displacing the rectum (R) to the right and extending into the presacral posterior pelvis.
Figure 6.26 Bilateral ovarian metastases from breast carcinoma. (A, B) Transaxial T2WI showing bilateral heterogeneous mixed signal intensity solid and cystic masses (T) with bigger cystic components seen in B. These were resected and were histologically confirmed metastases from breast carcinoma. There are multiple sclerotic metastases in the iliac bone (arrow).
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FURTHER READING Bazot M, Daraı¨ E, Nassar-Slaba J, et al. Value of magnetic resonance imaging for the diagnosis of ovarian tumours: a review. J Comput Assist Tomogr 2008; 32:712–723. Discusses the role and limitations of MRI in assessing ovarian tumours especially the relevance of features to distinguish between benign, borderline and invasive ovarian tumour. Holalkere Nagaraj-Setty, Katur Avinah M, Lee Susanna I. Issues in imaging malignant neoplasm of the female reproductive system. Curr Probl Diagn Radiol 2009; 38:1–16. Discusses the role of imaging in ovarian cancer, staging, posttreatment assessment, and emerging techniques. Kyriazi S, Kaye SB, deSouza NM. Imaging ovarian cancer and peritoneal metastasis—current and emerging techniques. Nat Rev Clin Oncol 2010; 7:1–13. Reviews the emerging role of functional imaging. Namimoto T, Awai K, Nakaura T, et al. Role of diffusion-weighted imaging in the diagnosis of gynaecological diseases. Eur Radiol
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2009; 19:745–760. Identifies limitations of DWI in differentiating benign from malignant tumors. Sohaib S, Reznek R. MR imaging in ovarian cancer. Cancer Imaging 2007; 7:S119–S129. Reviews the evidence for and the use of MR in imaging ovarian cancer. Sohaib S, Reznek R. Ovarian cancer. In: Husband Janet ES, Reznek R, eds. Imaging in Oncology. Oxford: Isis Medical Media Ltd., 2010:395–430. A chapter summarizing the imaging features of malignant ovarian disease for all commonly used imaging modalities. Also provides a summary of epidemiology and pathology. Tomassin-Naggara I, Cuenod CA, Darai E, et al. Dynamic contrastenhanced MR imaging of ovarian neoplasms: current status and future perspectives. Magn Reson Imaging Clin North Am 2008; 16:661–672. This suggests that the use of semiquantitative perfusion parameters would improve preoperative characterization of ovarian masses when assessing morphological features associated with malignancy.
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7 Vaginal cancer M. Ben Taylor
EPIDEMIOLOGY
PROGNOSTIC INDICATORS
Vaginal carcinoma is a rare disease, accounting for 2% to 3% of gynecological malignancies. The incidence in the United States is around 0.6 per 100,000. It is predominantly a disease of middle age and the elderly, with a median age of 60 at diagnosis. In common with cervical carcinoma, invasive vaginal carcinoma is associated with vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia (VAIN), often induced by exposure to human papillomavirus. In around 30% of cases, there is a history of intraepithelial neoplasia or invasive carcinoma of the cervix or vulva. The rare clear cell carcinoma, which affects young women, is associated with maternal exposure to diethylstilbestrol.
The following factors affect prognosis:
HISTOPATHOLOGY Around 90% of tumors are squamous cell carcinomas and 5% to 10% are adenocarcinomas. Other tumor types are rare and include clear cell carcinoma, small cell carcinoma, melanoma, and sarcomas.
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Tumor stage. This stage is the most important prognostic factor, with one large series quoting a 10-year disease-free survival of 80% for stage I, 38% for stage III, and 0% for stage IV. Tumor size. Tumors more than 4 cm in diameter have a worse prognosis, but this variable is not independent of tumor stage. Tumor position. Tumors of the lower two-third of the vagina or involving the posterior wall have a worse prognosis. Tumor morphology. Stage I tumors with a superficially ulcerated exophytic morphology have a better prognosis than infiltrative or necrotic tumors of the same stage. Histological grade. Poorly differentiated tumors have a worse prognosis. Histological type. One series suggested that adenocarcinomas had a worse prognosis, but this has not been confirmed by other studies.
PATTERNS OF TUMOR SPREAD Most vaginal carcinomas arise in the upper-third of the vagina. Direct involvement of the cervix is common. This may lead to problems with classification as the FIGO classification system states that vaginal tumors that extend to the external cervical os should always be considered cervical carcinomas. Tumors breaching the vaginal wall first extend into the paracolpol adventitia, but even small tumors may spread anteriorly to the adjacent bladder serosa or outer muscle layer, or posteriorly to the rectovaginal septum. Larger tumors may extend laterally and obstruct the lower ureter, or extend beyond this to the pelvic sidewall. Anteriorly and posteriorly, tumors may show more extensive invasion of the muscle wall and mucosa of the bladder or rectum, respectively. Large tumors extending superiorly may breach the peritoneum and involve the sigmoid colon or small bowel loops. Lower vaginal tumors may extend anteriorly to involve the urethra or extend onto the perineum and involve the vulva or anus. When extensive, these tumors may be difficult to classify as being of vaginal, vulval, or anal origin. The vagina has a rich lymphatic drainage. The lower vaginal lymphatics drain with those of the vulva to the inguinal nodes. Those of the mid- and upper vagina drain predominantly to the obturator nodes, although the posterior wall may drain first to the perirectal nodes. Tumor spread is then usually contiguous, through the internal, external, and common iliac chains and eventually to the upper retroperitoneum. Hematogenous spread may occur and is most commonly to the lungs.
TREATMENT Surgery Surgical options include partial vaginectomy with radical hysterectomy for tumors of the upper vagina. Tumors of the mid or lower vagina may require total vaginectomy. Surgery will usually include bilateral pelvic lymph node resection. Pelvic exenteration is an option for selected patients, particularly when pelvic irradiation has been previously given or in patients with a rectovaginal or vesicovaginal fistula. However, the role of surgery in vaginal carcinoma is not well defined, and most patients are treated by radiotherapy.
Radiotherapy and Chemoradiotherapy Concurrent treatment with chemotherapy and radiotherapy is considered the optimal treatment for the majority of patients with squamous cell primary vaginal carcinoma. However, this treatment has higher toxicity than radiotherapy alone and is not suitable for all patients. Patients with significant comorbidity will often be treated with radiotherapy alone. External beam radiotherapy is used and must include the primary tumor and the regional lymph nodes (e.g., inguinal nodes must be included in tumors of the lower vagina). Brachytherapy, which is the local internal application of radiation sources, is particularly useful as an adjunct to external beam radiotherapy in earlier stage tumors. There is no direct evidence of benefit from chemotherapy alone in vaginal carcinoma.
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MRI OF VAGINAL CARCINOMA Technique As for other pelvic tumors, imaging is best performed with a phased array surface coil utilizing turbo spin echo sequences. Thin section T2-weighted sequences in the transaxial and sagittal planes are most valuable in the evaluation of local tumor extent. Transaxial images must include the entire vagina down to the vulva; this usually requires more than one series. Off-axis imaging, perpendicular to the vagina, may be helpful to assess invasion of the bladder or rectum. T1-weighted images are acquired in the transaxial plane through the entire pelvis to include the upper pelvic lymph node groups. An additional coronal T1-weighted sequence to cover the entire abdomen is helpful in assessing upper retroperitoneal lymph node metastases, bone metastases, and hydronephrosis. Tampons may obscure detail of the vaginal mucosa and should not be used. Intravenous contrast agents are not routinely used, but dynamic T1-weighted gadolinium-enhanced fat-saturated sequences may be of value in delineating tumor extent, with tumor typically showing early enhancement. Delayed sequences, obtained after filling of the bladder with gadolinium, can demonstrate small fistulae from the bladder. MR vaginography, using saline or other positive contrast material, injected via a Foley catheter, can be used to obtain vaginal distension. T2-weighted sequences are then performed in the standard planes. This technique has been used to determine the vaginal extent of cervical carcinomas and could also be of use in primary vaginal carcinoma.
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uum representing fibrosis. In the acute stage, there may be edema of the vaginal mucosa and muscle layer, manifest as high signal on T2WI, which usually develops 3 to 6 months following radiotherapy. This high signal typically subsides 12 to 24 months following radiotherapy, but may persist for many years. In the long term, the vaginal muscle wall is more typically of low signal on T1WI and T2WI due to fibrosis and the vagina may be shortened or stenosed. The vagina may also be distorted with tethering to structures previously involved by tumor.
Post Treatment: Surgery For small tumors in the upper vagina, partial vaginectomy may be performed, with hysterectomy if the uterus has not previously been removed. The oversewn residual vagina has a linear or bow tie shape and may have a nodular contour. The vaginal wall is normally of low signal on T2WI due to fibrosis, this is a helpful feature in distinguishing postsurgical change from tumor, which is typically of intermediate to high signal.
MRI Staging Accuracy
Vaginal carcinomas are typically of intermediate signal intensity on T1-weighted images and relatively high signal intensity on T2-weighted images, compared to the normal vaginal fibromuscular layer and pelvic muscles. Small tumors may be difficult to distinguish from the high-signal epithelial layer and central mucus on T2-weighted images. Larger tumors can be seen invading the low-signal vaginal wall and extending into the paracolpol fat. Tumors typically show early phase enhancement following intravenous gadolinium. Very large tumors will commonly show central necrosis.
Vaginal carcinoma is a rare disease so that there are no large published series comparing MRI staging with either surgically resected specimens or clinical staging. MRI has better soft tissue discrimination than CT and is more sensitive in the detection of small tumors and in the identification of local invasion of the pelvic floor, perineum, urethra, and anal canal. CT is a useful alternative to MRI in large tumors when assessment of bladder or rectal invasion is required (Table 7.1). Assessment of nodal status in pelvic malignancy is based on nodal size and shape, with nodes 10 mm in maximum short-axis diameter or with a round shape being more likely to be involved by tumor. Accuracies are similar for CT and MRI. Nodes showing signal intensity similar to that of the primary tumor, or with central necrosis, manifest as central high signal on T2-weighted images or lack of enhancement following gadolinium, are more likely to be metastatic. Disruption of the smooth contour of the node, with irregularity of the nodal margin is a sign of extracapsular extension of tumor and is highly specific for malignancy.
Post Treatment: Radiotherapy
Current Indications
Following radiotherapy, the primary tumor will typically shrink and small tumors may no longer be visible. Larger tumors, if successfully treated, will show a low–signal resid-
The role of MRI in the staging of vaginal carcinoma is incompletely defined. More studies are required, but are difficult due to the rarity of the tumor. In most cases, initial management
Imaging Features
Table 7.1 Staging of Vaginal Cancer: ACJJ (2010) and FIGO (2009) Classifications TNM Tx T0 Tis T1 T2 T3 T4 Nx N0 N1 M0 M1
FIGO
I II III IV IVA
IVB
Cannot assess primary tumor No evidence of primary tumor Carcinoma in situ (preinvasive carcinoma) Carcinoma limited to vagina Carcinoma involves the paravaginal tissues but does not extend to the pelvic wall Carcinoma extends to the pelvic wall Carcinoma extends beyond the true pelvis or invades the mucosa of the bladder or rectum Spread to adjacent organs, direct extension beyond the true pelvis, or both Cannot assess regional lymph node No regional nodal metastases Pelvic or inguinal nodal metastases No distant metastases Distant metastases (includes lymph node metastases outside the pelvis or inguinal regions)
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decisions are based on clinical examination. However, clinical examination may be inaccurate, and ideally MRI should also be performed as it may detect more advanced disease than has been suspected clinically and lead to alterations in management. MRI has an important role in selection of patients and surgical planning prior to pelvic exenteration. The likelihood of pelvic lymph node metastases, determined by MRI or CT, will affect radiotherapy planning. MRI is useful in detecting tumor recurrence, particularly in patients with vaginal stenosis secondary to radiotherapy who cannot be adequately examined clinically. In addition, in patients with symptoms suggestive of colovaginal or vesicovaginal fistula, MRI is the imaging investigation of choice for delineation of the extent of the fistula and for surgical planning.
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The introitus is difficult to assess on MRI, as it is often asymmetrical and the superficial perineal structures are of similar signal to tumor on T2W images. Fortunately, superficial tumor extent is usually apparent clinically. Dynamic T1-weighted gadolinium-enhanced fat-saturated sequences may be of value in the perineum and vulva, with enhancing tumor seen well against the saturated vulval fat. Following radiotherapy it is often difficult to discriminate between a sterile tumor residuum and recurrent tumor. Inert posttreatment residuum is fibrotic and typically of low signal, whereas tumor is more commonly of intermediate to high signal on T2WI. However, there is overlap in the appearances and both may show gadolinium enhancement. Consequently, biopsy is often required to diagnose recurrence. Alternatively, enlargement of a mass on serial examinations is almost invariably due to recurrence.
Following biopsy, differentiation of tumor from inflammation and hemorrhage is often difficult, particularly if the primary tumor is small.
Figure 7.1 Normal appearance of the vagina. (A) Transaxial T2WI through the lower vagina showing normal anatomy. The collapsed vagina is seen as a “W-shaped” structure with a low-signal fibromuscular wall (black arrows). A thin layer of central high signal within the vagina represents the vaginal mucosa and intraluminal mucus. The high signal of the paracolpol adventitia surrounding the vagina (asterisk) is due to slow flowing blood within the vaginal venous plexus. (B) Sagittal T2WI through the pelvis showing normal anatomy. The anterior (long arrows) and posterior (short arrows) fibromuscular walls of the vagina are of low signal intensity. The vaginal mucosa and intraluminal mucus are visible as a thin layer of high signal intensity. The vaginal is arbitrarily divided into thirds. The upper-third includes the vaginal fornices and is demarcated from the middle-third by the inferior margin of the anterior lip of the cervix (line A). The middle- and lower-thirds are demarcated by a line drawn transaxially from the junction of the bladder and the urethra, at the bladder neck (line B). A small nabothian cyst is seen in the anterior cervix as a well-defined, rounded area of high signal (small black arrow). Abbreviations: A, anal canal; U, urethra.
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Figure 7.2 T1 N0 Vaginal carcinoma. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI showing a small tumor (arrow) in the left mid-vagina. The tumor is constrained by the low-signal vaginal wall.
Figure 7.3 T2 N0 Vaginal carcinoma (clear cell carcinoma). (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI showing a heterogenous soft tissue tumor (T) in the upper and mid-vagina in a patient who had undergone previous hysterectomy. Tumor expands the vaginal lumen and breaches the low-signal vaginal wall laterally to involve the paracolpol fat (small arrows in A). The sigmoid colon is tethered to the vaginal vault (open arrow in B), but this may be a normal postoperative finding. Anteriorly the tumor is fixed to the bladder muscle wall (arrow in B).
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Figure 7.4 T2 N1 Vaginal carcinoma. Transaxial T2WI of tumor (T) circumferentially thickening the lower vagina, but not extending to the pelvic floor nor involving the urethra (arrow). There is a small amount of fluid in the vaginal lumen (asterisk). A small nodule of tumor is seen within the paracolpol adventitia posterior to the vagina on the left (crossed arrow). There are bilateral inguinal lymph node metastases (N) of similar signal intensity to the primary tumor.
Figure 7.5 T2 N1 Vaginal carcinoma with posterior pelvic lymph node metastases. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI showing tumor (T) predominantly involving the posterior wall of the upper vagina and also within the anterior fornix (A). There are enlarged internal iliac (I), obturator (O), and perirectal (arrows) nodes, which show signal intensity similar to the primary tumor. The uterus is anteverted with a prominent junctional zone (J) and a small subserosal fibroid (F).
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Figure 7.6 T2 N0 Vaginal carcinoma with ureteric obstruction and adherence to the posterior bladder wall. Transaxial T2WI showing spiculated tumor at the vaginal vault (T) with low-signal tumor extending into the parametrium (P), onto the posterior bladder wall (B) and around the perirectal fascia (F). The left ureter (U) is obstructed by tumor but this, unlike the staging system for cervical carcinoma, does not increase the tumor stage to T3. Involvement of the bladder muscle wall is insufficient to classify the tumor as T4; for this stage to apply tumor must extend to involve the bladder mucosa.
Figure 7.7 T3, N0 Vaginal carcinoma involving the levator ani, bladder and bowel muscle layers, with good response to radiotherapy. (A) Sagittal T2WI, (B) sagittal contrast-enhanced fat-saturated T1WI, and (C) transaxial T2WI showing lobulated tumor (T) within the mid- and upper-thirds of the vagina. Anteriorly, tumor infiltrates the muscle wall of the bladder (arrows in A and B) and posteriorly indents the anterior wall of the rectum (arrowhead in A), although the rectum cannot be fully assessed on the sagittal images. The lobulated tumor shows heterogeneous contrast enhancement and the anterior extension into the bladder muscle wall is well demonstrated (arrow in B). On the transaxial image, tumor (T) is seen expanding the vagina and extending beyond the vaginal wall to involve the left levator ani muscle (crossed arrow). Posteriorly, the tumor indents the anterior wall of the rectum and infiltrates the muscle layer (arrowheads in C) but does not involve the mucosa. (D) Axial T2WI through the mid-vagina 20 months following radiotherapy. There has been a good response to treatment, with resolution of the previously seen intermediate signal mass. This has been replaced by a thickened low-signal band which involves the posterior wall of the vagina and is inseparable from the rectal muscle wall (arrowheads) and left levator ani muscle (arrow). The rectal mucosa and submucosa show high signal due to the previous radiotherapy (asterisk). (Continued)
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Figure 7.7 (Continued )
Figure 7.8 T3 N1 Vaginal carcinoma invading the perineal structures. (A) Transaxial T2WI at the level of the lower vagina (V) showing tumor (T) on the left side invading the left anterior puborectalis muscle (P). There is circumferential involvement of the urethra (U) with loss of its normal zonal anatomy. There are left inguinal lymph node metastases (N) and a metastatic left anatomical obturator node (asterisk; these lymph nodes lie between the obturator externus and pectineus muscles and are not normally visible). (B) Transaxial T2WI at a slightly lower level, showing tumor extending through the left superficial perineal space (S) to involve the left ischiocavernosus muscle and crus of clitoris (asterisks). The perineal body (P), urethral meatus (U), and left bulbospongiosus muscle (B) are also invaded. There are left inguinal lymph node metastases (N) (not fully shown). Wrap artifact is seen on the left side of the image (the patient’s right side). Abbreviation: R, lower rectum.
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Figure 7.9 T3 N0 Vaginal carcinoma involving the urethra and perineal body. Transaxial T2WI showing circumferential tumor (T) involving the lower vagina with direct invasion of the urethra (arrow). Posteriorly, tumor involves the perineal body on the left (short arrow).
Figure 7.10 T3, N0 vaginal carcinoma involving the perineal body. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI showing a lobulated tumor (T) involving the lower vagina. The tumor extends to the introitus but does not involve the urethral meatus (U). Posteriorly, lobulated tumor extends into the perineal body (arrow).
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Figure 7.11 T4 N0 Vaginal carcinoma involving the posterior bladder wall. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI showing a large tumor (T) filling the lower vagina and breaching the left vaginal wall with involvement of the left levator ani muscle (white arrow). Anteriorly, the margin of the tumor is poorly defined but extends to either side of the urethra (U) (black arrows in A). In B the tumor is seen involving the entire length of the anterior vaginal wall. The low-signal bladder muscle wall is destroyed and tumor involves the bladder mucosa (arrows).
Figure 7.12 T4 N0 Vaginal carcinoma involving the bladder muscle layer, rectum and sigmoid colon. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI showing an upper vaginal tumor (T) which infiltrates the paracolpol tissues and extends along the perirectal fascia bilaterally (crossed arrows). In the midline, there is breach of the perirectal fascia with tumor extension to the rectum (arrow), including the rectal mucosa (arrowheads in A). The sagittal image (B) shows tumor extending anteriorly to invade the posterior bladder wall. The low-signal bladder muscle wall is interrupted (arrowhead) and there is bladder mucosal edema (arrows). Superiorly, the tumor invades the peritoneum and extends to the wall of the sigmoid colon (open arrow).
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Figure 7.13 T4, N1 vaginal carcinoma involving the sigmoid colon and with multiple perirectal nodes. (A) Transaxial T1WI, (B) transaxial oblique T2WI, and (C) left parasagittal T2WI showing a large lobulated mass (T) within the upper vagina and a ring pessary in situ (P). On the left, the tumor extends posteriorly along the perirectal fascia (arrowhead in B) and superiorly the tumor extends across the peritoneum to involve the wall of the sigmoid colon (open arrow in C). There are multiple enlarged perirectal nodes (arrows), with a left perirectal node (arrow in B) having a cystic (necrotic) center and an irregular margin, its appearance is consistent with a metastatic node with extracapsular tumor spread.
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Figure 7.14 T4 N0 Vaginal carcinoma involving the bladder, rectum, and pelvic floor. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI showing a large tumor (T) with circumferential involvement of the entire length of the vagina. Tumor extends posteriorly to invade the rectum (asterisk) and laterally to invade the left levator ani muscle (large white arrow). Anteriorly there is tumor invasion of the posterior bladder wall with tumor extension to the bladder mucosa (small black arrows).
Figure 7.15 T4 N0 Vaginal carcinoma invading the ischioanal fossa. (A, B) Transaxial T2WI showing a lower right vaginal tumor (T) which extends laterally into the paracolpol space and posteriorly to invade the lower rectum (R) (open arrow). At the lower level (B), there is extensive tumor infiltration of the perineum with extension through the right puborectalis muscle into the ischioanal fat (arrow) and circumferential involvement of the lower urethra (U). The bulbospongiosus muscles (B) and right ischiocavernosus muscle (asterisks) are well seen and are not involved by the tumor. Low-signal normal vaginal muscular wall (V).
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Figure 7.16 T4 N1 Vaginal carcinoma with rectovaginal fistula. Transaxial T2WI showing an upper vaginal tumor which presented with a rectovaginal fistula. Low-signal tumor (T) extends from the right lateral vagina (V) along the right uterosacral ligament (arrowheads) and is tethered to the sacrum posteriorly (arrow) (tethering incompletely seen on this image). Tumor extends through the right perirectal space to invade the rectum (R). Fluid and locules of gas are seen within the fistula tract (asterisk). There are bilateral enlarged external iliac lymph nodes (N), which have a higher signal intensity than the primary tumor, these are suspicious of metastases but could represent reactive nodes.
Figure 7.17 Vagina following radiotherapy for cervical carcinoma. Axial T2WI showing high signal thickening (arrows) of the lower vagina, principally involving the muscular component, in a patient treated with radiotherapy for cervical carcinoma 20 years previously. High signal in the vaginal wall typically resolves within 12 to 18 months after radiotherapy but may persist indefinitely.
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Figure 7.18 Vaginal stenosis and hematocolpos following radiotherapy for vaginal carcinoma. (A) Sagittal T2WI, (B) transaxial T2WI, and (C) transaxial T1WI in a patient with T2 N1 vaginal carcinoma, treated with radiotherapy 18 months previously. The lower vagina shows high signal within its wall (arrow in A), consistent with radiotherapy change. Clinically the patient had stenosis of the lower vagina. The upper and mid-vagina is expanded and contains homogeneous intermediate to high-signal fluid (asterisk). The vaginal wall is smooth and not thickened. High signal is noted within the fat of the anterior pelvis and within the coccygeus muscles (arrowheads in B), consistent with radiotherapy effect. In C, the material within the expanded vaginal lumen, shows relatively high signal intensity (asterisk), consistent with either blood products or proteinaceous fluid.
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Figure 7.19 T3, N0 vaginal carcinoma, with partial response following chemoradiotherapy. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI showing lobulated tumor (T) expanding the lower vagina, extending to the introitus and involving the lower urethra (arrows). There is a welldefined complex cystic mass within the pouch of Douglas (asterisk), this showed high signal on fat-saturated T1WI and was considered to be a hemorrhagic cyst of indeterminate nature. (C) Sagittal and (D) transaxial T2WI five months following radiotherapy. The lower vaginal mass has considerably reduced in size, but there is a residual intermediate to high-signal nodule (open arrow) on the anterior vaginal wall at the introitus, suggestive of residual tumor. The tumor involving the lower urethra has resolved and the urethra has a normal appearance (U). There is residual vaginal wall thickening showing high signal (arrows) due to edema. There is also high signal within the submucosa and muscle layer of the rectum and within the muscle wall of the bladder (arrowheads), consistent with radiotherapy effect.
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Figure 7.20 T2, N0 vaginal carcinoma with early tumor progression following chemoradiotherapy. (A) Sagittal T2WI showing intermediate signal tumor (T), slightly expanding the upper vagina. The tumor does not infiltrate beyond the posterior vaginal wall and the rectum (R) appears normal. (B) Sagittal and (C) transaxial T2WI three months following completion of chemoradiotherapy. The upper vaginal tumor (T) has enlarged and now extends beyond the posterior vaginal wall and infiltrates the rectum (arrows). The tumor is also inseparable from the posterior bladder muscle wall (arrowheads in B), but this area is difficult to assess as the high signal within the muscle may be secondary to radiotherapy. High signal is also seen within the submucosa of the rectum (R) and within the mid- and lower-vaginal walls (V), due to radiotherapy change.
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Figure 7.21 Vesicovaginal fistula and recurrent tumor following radiotherapy for T4 vaginal carcinoma. (A) Sagittal and (B, C) transaxial T2WI showing a right-sided vesicovaginal fistula (black arrows). Urine passes through the fistula and distends the vaginal lumen (V). The bladder wall is thickened and irregular with debris within its lumen (B). There is disruption of the anterior bladder wall, which contains air (A). There is also a defect in the anteroinferior bladder wall and urine tracks around the pubis (P) into the anterior abdominal wall (asterisk). At the higher transaxial level (C), there is recurrent tumor (T) at the right vesicoureteric junction obstructing the right ureter (U). The collection containing urine and air due to bladder rupture is seen anteriorly within the rectus abdominis muscles or rectus sheath (asterisk). High signal is seen in the rectal submucosa (R) and pelvic fat (F) due to radiotherapy induced edema and inflammation. High signal in the obturator externus muscles (M) may either be radiotherapy related or due to inflammation induced by the anterior urine leak. Differentiation of recurrent tumor from posttreatment fibrosis or inflammatory tissue may be difficult. Tumor is typically of intermediate to high signal and has a solid appearance with mass effect. Fibrosis is typically of low signal with tethering and retraction of adjacent structures. Inflammatory masses are less common but may be indistinguishable from recurrent tumor. Abbreviations: C, cervix; U, uterus.
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FURTHER READING Brown JJ, Guitierrez ED, Lee JK. MR appearance of the normal and abnormal vagina after hysterectomy. AJR Am J Roentgenol 1992; 158:95–99. A description of postsurgical appearances. Chang SD. Imaging of the vagina and vulva. Radiol Clin N Am 2002; 40:637–658. Includes discussion of imaging in vaginal and vulval carcinoma. Chang YCF, Hricak H, Thurnher S, Lacey CG. Vagina: evaluation with MR imaging. Part 2. Neoplasms. Radiology 1988; 169:175–179. Chyle V, Zagars GK, Wheeler JA, et al. Definitive radiotherapy for carcinoma of the vagina: outcome and prognostic features. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 1996; 35:891–905. A clinical review of 301 patients treated with radiotherapy. Hricak H, Chang YCF, Thurnher S. Vagina: evaluation with MR imaging. Part 1. Normal anatomy and congenital anomalies. Radiology 1988; 169:169–174. First article to describe the MR appearances of the vagina.
Parikh JH, Barton DP, Ind TE, Sohaib SA. MR imaging features of vaginal malignancies. Radiographics 2008; 28(1):49–63. Well-illustrated pictoral review of primary vaginal tumors. Siegelman ES, Outwater EK, Banner MP, et al. High-resolution MR imaging of the vagina. Radiographics 1997; 17:1183–1203. Beautifully illustrated article including normal anatomy, congenital anomalies, and neoplasms. Taylor MB, Dugar N, Davidson SE, Carrington BM. Magnetic resonance imaging of primary vaginal carcinoma. Clin Radiol 2007; 62(6):549– 555. Description of 25 cases of primary vaginal carcinoma, with clinical correlation, at our institution. Van Hoe L, Vanbeckevoort D, Oyen R, et al. Cervical Carcinoma: optimized local staging with intravaginal contrast-enhanced MR imaging—preliminary results. Radiology 1999; 213:608–611. A description of MR vaginography in cervical carcinoma.
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8 Vulval cancer Maryna Brochwicz-Lewinski and Jane Hawnaur
BACKGROUND INFORMATION Epidemiology Vulval cancer is rare, accounting for less than 1% of all cancers and 3% to 5% of gynecological cancer. One thousand and sixtythree women were diagnosed with vulval cancer in 2006 in the United Kingdom, and 368 disease-related deaths were reported in 2007. Incidence rates vary worldwide from 0.3 per 100,000 in parts of Asia to approximately 1.6 per 100,000 in North America and Europe. Although peak incidence is in the sixth and seventh decades of life, there is an increasing trend in the number of younger patients affected, thought to be linked to vulval intraepithelial neoplasia (VIN) caused by human papillomavirus (HPV). HPV is strongly associated with vulval cancer, with 70% to 90% of squamous cell tumors containing HPV DNA. Other risk factors include smoking, previous cervical cancer, genital warts, cancers at other anogenital sites, and immunosuppression (HIV and transplant). In older patients, chronic vulvitis may predispose to VIN. Patients present with symptoms including a mass lesion, pruritis, pain, or discharge, and are generally diagnosed by clinical examination combined with punch biopsy of well-defined lesions or random biopsies of diffuse vulval abnormality. Overall survival is worse with increasing patient age and in those from lower socioeconomic groups. Five-year survival in the 15- to 49-year age group is 83%, but falls to 52% in those older than 70. Mortality rates have decreased by more than 50% since the early 1970s, predominantly in those under 40.
Histopathology Squamous cell carcinoma accounts for more than 90% of vulval tumors. The remaining 10% includes malignant melanoma, basal cell carcinoma, and adenocarcinomas arising in Bartholin’s or urethral glands. As with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) and invasive cervical cancer, vulval carcinoma is thought to arise from VIN, progressing from low-grade VIN (dysplasia) to high-grade VIN (carcinoma in situ). Vulval carcinoma is often found adjacent to areas of VIN.
Patterns of Tumor Spread Invasive lesions extend in breadth and depth within the vulval skin and may eventually invade the urethra, vagina, or anus. Multifocal disease is not unusual. Lymphovascular space invasion is associated with metastases to the regional lymph nodes. Tumors on the labia majora, labia minora, fourchette, and clitoris drain to the superficial and deep inguinal nodes and then to the pelvic lymph nodes. Although lateral tumors usually involve the ipsilateral groin nodes initially, contralateral or bilateral nodal metastases can occur because of communication in the lymphatic network across the vulva. Central tumors and
those invading the urethra, vagina, or anus may metastasize directly to the pelvic lymph nodes. The obturator nodes are most frequently involved, followed by the external iliac, internal iliac, and common iliac lymph nodes. Distant metastases, for example, to liver, lung, or bone are uncommon.
TNM and FIGO Classification Revised FIGO staging of 2009 made significant alteration to vulval cancer reflecting the prognostic importance of the size of lymph nodes, the number of nodes involved, and extracapsular involvement. Stage 0 (Tis) is no longer included in the FIGO staging (Table 8.1).
Prognostic Indicators The most important prognostic indicators in vulval cancer are tumor size, depth of invasion, and the presence and number of lymph node metastases. Node-negative survival following surgery is reported at 70% to 90%, with node-positive survival dropping to 25% to 40%. The tumor site is a further prognostic factor; central tumors (involving the clitoris) have a worse prognosis than lateral tumors and are more difficult to treat. The tumor-free margin distance also impacts on the local recurrence rate, with a distance less than 8 mm resulting in increased local recurrence of 23% to 50% (overall local recurrence rate 1–10%).
Treatment Surgery Standard treatment for early-stage disease involves radical excision of the tumor by either wide local excision or hemivulvectomy when the tumor is well lateralized, plus elective inguinofemoral lymph node dissection for tumors with greater than 1-mm depth invasion. Advanced or multifocal disease requires a total vulvectomy. Surgical excision attempts to resect the tumor while leaving sufficient vulval skin to allow reconstruction. If this is not possible then skin flaps may be needed to close the wound. Only 25% to 35% of patients with early-stage disease have lymph node metastases, potentially resulting in unnecessary lymph node resection in a significant number of patients. Lymph node resection is associated with significant morbidity including reduced wound healing, lymphedema, and erysipelas. Recently, there has been considerable interest in sentinel node imaging as a minimally invasive technique for detection of inguinofemoral metastases. To be acceptable, the technique must have a low false-negative rate as unrecognized lymph node disease has a poor prognosis. To date, studies are promising and its use in specialist centers is increasing.
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Table 8.1 FIGO (2009) and TNM (2010) Classification of Vulval Cancer TNM stage
FIGO stage
TX T0 Tis T1a T1b T2
IA IB II
T3
IVA
NX N0 NI N1a N1b N2 N2a N2b N2c N3 M0 MI
IIIA IIIA IIIB IIIB IIIB IIIC IVA IVB
Clinical description of tumor extent Cannot assess primary tumor No evidence of primary tumor Preinvasive carcinoma; carcinoma in situ Lesions of 2.0 cm confined to the vulva or perineum with 1.0 mm stromal penetration Lesions of 2.0 cm or any size with >1.0 mm penetration of the stroma, limited to the vulva or perineum Any size tumor with extension to adjacent perineal structures. Lower distal 1/3 urethra, lower distal 1/3 vagina, and anal involvement Any size tumor with extension to upper/proximal 2/3 of urethra, upper/proximal 2/3 vagina, bladder mucosa or rectal mucosa, or fixed to pelvic bone Cannot assess regional lymph nodes No regional lymph node metastasis One or two regional lymph nodes with the following features One lymph node metastasis 5 mm One lymph node metastasis 5 mm Regional lymph node metastases with the following features Three or more lymph node metastases <5 mm Two or more lymph node metastases 5 mm Extracapsular spread Regional lymph node metastasis fixed or ulcerated No distant metastasis Distant metastasis
Abbreviations: TNM, Tumor Node Metastasis; FIGO, Federation Internationale Gynecologie et Oncologie.
Radiotherapy and Chemotherapy Adjuvant radiotherapy is given to patients with positive resection margins or positive nodes. Radical radiotherapy with or without chemotherapy may be given where surgery is not considered possible at initial presentation particularly in the elderly population. Advanced tumors may be treated with combined modality treatment of radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and radical surgery, which has a high morbidity and requires careful patient selection.
MRI OF VULVAL CANCER Technique Vulval carcinoma can be imaged using a standard magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) pelvic tumor protocol to show the extent of the primary tumor and assess the pelvic lymph nodes. A phased array body coil should be used. A surface coil positioned over the groins, centered on the symphysis pubis may improve sensitivity for lymph node metastases. There are few published studies on technique in vulval imaging, but a combination of T1W, T2W, and T2W fat saturation images is generally accepted. A suggested technique includes a standard pelvic protocol of T2W imaging in at least two planes, plus axial T1W and coronal T2W fat-suppressed sequences to assess the inguinal nodes. The field of view should be centered over the symphysis pubis and should extend to the lateral end of the inguinal ligament to cover the lateral group of superficial nodes. Contrast-enhanced MR may improve tumor conspicuity but has not been shown to have a significant effect on staging accuracy.
Current Indications The literature is scant for the role of MR in vulval cancer, despite the potential ability both to accurately depict the extent of the primary tumor and to examine the lymph nodes. This may reflect
the rarity of vulval cancer. Planning surgical approach, however, depends on assessment of the extent of the tumor and the detection of nodal metastases. MR can assess the depth of invasion and identify involvement of the urethra, vagina, and anus, which may be difficult to assess on clinical examination, particularly in obese patients without recourse to examination under anesthesia. MR may also play a role in assessing case selection for sentinel node imaging, reducing false-negative sentinel node imaging due to lymphatic stasis, by identifying patients with metastatic disease preoperatively. Several studies have reported negative predictive values of >90% for nodal evaluation in vulval cancer, which may be clinically useful in identifying those patients who can be spared lymph node dissection.
Staging Accuracy Compared to Other Imaging Techniques Accuracies of 83% in sizing tumor and 85% in identifying nodal metastases are reported. Previous studies quoted sensitivities between 40% and 89% and specificity of 82% to 100% for identifying nodal metastases. There are no comparative studies with CT or ultrasound, but MR may be superior as it has the ability to assess both primary tumor and nodes. The role of FDG-PET and PET-CT has not been formally established in staging vulval cancer, and an early study using FDG-PET suggests results in assessing groin nodes comparable to MR with higher accuracy for extranodal disease. PET-CT has also been described in case reports successfully demonstrating metastatic vulval deposits, either detecting secondary lesions or identifying the primary site in known metastatic vulval disease. Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) of gynecological cancers is not well established. Although a potential role in evaluation of lymph nodes in vulval cancer has been suggested, recent reports have demonstrated an inability to differentiate between benign and malignant lymph nodes as both may appear bright on high b-value images with corresponding low apparent
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diffusion coefficient (ADC) values. DWI may prove useful in lymph node detection and mapping, but more work is required.
Imaging Features Primary Tumor This is best seen on T2W images as an intermediate signal intensity mass or thickening of the vulval skin. T2W fat-suppressed images may make small lesions more conspicuous as the perineal region is fat laden and tumors with intermediate to high signal intensity may be difficult to appreciate. The relationship of the tumor to the clitoris, urethra, vagina, and anus is important prognostically, and if deep invasion is suspected, T2W images in the sagittal or coronal planes can be helpful in assessing the cranial extent of tumor. Invasion is indicated by replacement of the relatively hypointense muscular coats of the urethra, vagina, or anorectum by intermediate signal intensity tumor, contiguous with the primary vulval tumor. The axial T2W sequence is also helpful in assessing the other genital tract organs since, occasionally, vulvovaginal tumor is metastatic from endometrial or ovarian carcinoma (Figs. 8.1 to 8.10). Lymph Node Disease Assessment of groin nodes using the maximum short-axis diameter has a reported sensitivity of 40% to 50%, but this is improved significantly by the addition of the short/long axis ratio (>0.75) to 85%. Lymph nodes can be assessed on all sequences; the T1W sequences provide morphological information (size, shape, margin, presence of fatty hilum) and the T2W sequences provide a degree of tissue characterization (nodal signal intensity, presence of cystic areas). Long axis >21 mm, short axis >10 mm, short/long-axis ratio >0.75, irregular contour of nodes and cystic change are particularly helpful signs. An irregular contour suggests extranodal spread and cystic change suggests a squamous cell carcinoma deposit (Figs. 8.11 to 8.16). Residual/Recurrent Disease Assessment of the vulva for residual tumor is difficult in the early postoperative period due to inflammatory changes and
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anatomical distortion. Reactive changes may cause false-positive assessment of inguinal lymph nodes if imaging is carried out soon after significant vulval resection. Recurrent tumor usually arises in the residual vulval tissue or in the deep inguinal and femoral nodes as they may remain after inguinal lymph node dissection. Limited evidence suggests DWI may be helpful in the identification of recurrent tumor (Figs. 8.17 to 8.20).
Pitfalls of MRI Staging the Primary Vulval Tumor The superficial extent of the tumor is assessed clinically and MR has the advantage in identifying deep tumor extension. l l
l
Stage I carcinoma may be too small to visualize on MR. Larger stage I or II tumors that are en plaque may be difficult to identify or distinguish from chronic inflammatory changes on the vulva. T2W fat-suppressed images may help. Early invasion of the urethral orifice, introitus, or anal margin can be difficult to exclude in tumors directly adjacent to these organs.
Imaging the Inguinal Lymph Nodes l
l
l
l
l
For obese patients with a large fatty apron, surface coils may be a significant distance from the inguinal lymph node chains, reducing the signal to noise ratio. In obese patients, it may be difficult to judge the depth of lymph nodes from the surface, requiring careful positioning of the field of view (FOV) to ensure complete coverage of superficial and deep inguinal nodes. Hip replacements and other orthopedic hardware in the pelvic region may produce artifacts in the inguinal regions, reducing image quality. Lymph node enlargement can be secondary to inflammatory changes in the perineum or lower limb. Microscopic metastases are not visible on MRI.
Figure 8.1 Normal vulval anatomy. Coronal T2WI showing normal vulval anatomy. Symphysis pubis (arrow). B, bladder; C, clitoris; LM, labium majora; P, body of pubis; U, uterus.
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Figure 8.2 T1a vulval carcinoma. (A) Coronal T1WI, (B) transaxial, and (C) sagittal T2WI showing a small (<2.0 cm) tumor (T), adjacent to but not invading the perineal structures. Normal lymph node (arrow), normal lymph node with fatty replacement (arrowhead), urethra (). Abbreviations: U, uterus; AC. anal canal; V, vagina.
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Figure 8.3 T1b posterior vulval carcinoma. (A) Coronal T1WI and (B) transaxial T2WI showing tumor (T) exceeding 2.0 cm in diameter centered on the posterior aspect of the left side of the vulva. Abbreviations: AC, anal canal; U, uterus.
Figure 8.4 T1b vulval carcinoma—anterior tumor. Transaxial T2WI depicting confined left vulval tumor (T) >2.0 cm with benign fat-containing ipsilateral lymph node (arrow).
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Figure 8.5 T1b vulval carcinoma—anterior tumor. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI showing tumor (T) exceeding 2.0 cm in diameter centered on the anterior aspect of the left side of the vulva.
Figure 8.6 T1b vulval carcinoma—central tumor. Transaxial T2WI demonstrating a bulky midline tumor (T) centered on the clitoris with a satellite nodule on the right labia superiorly (asterisk). Posteriorly the tumor involves the perineal body (arrow). Abbreviation: AC, anal canal.
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Figure 8.7 T2 vulval carcinoma—perineal and urethral involvement. (A) Transaxial T2WI at the level of the symphysis pubis (asterisk) shows a predominantly left-sided tumor which is involving the levator ani muscle (arrows). Posterior urethral invasion (open arrow) and early left anterolateral anal involvement with discontinuity of the hypointense muscular layer (arrowheads) are shown. (B) Sagittal T2WI in the same patient confirms posterior urethral involvement (arrow) and shows involvement of the lower vagina (asterisk) by centrally necrotic tumor (T).
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Figure 8.8 T2 vulval carcinoma—posterior tumor involving anal canal, lower vagina, and urethra. (A) Sagittal T2WI shows extensive posterior tumor (T) with a satellite nodule (asterisk) which involves the anal canal, lower third vagina, and urethra. The superior limit of the tumor may be difficult to identify on sagittal imaging if it is poorly defined and returns similar signal to the adjacent soft tissues. In these cases, orthogonal planes are helpful. (B) Coronal T2WI confirms involvement of the anal canal. The tumor (T) involves the right side of the anal canal (AC) but does not extend superiorly to the rectum.
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Figure 8.9 T3 vulval carcinoma involving the mid-third vagina. (A) Parasagittal T2WI of vulval tumor ( T ) extending cranially to the midthird of the vagina. A small amount of the hypointense muscular layer of the posterior margin of the vagina is evident on this image (open arrow). (B) Transaxial T2WI at a more caudal level shows tumor involving the anal canal posteriorly (arrows) and extending anteriorly into the right puborectalis muscle (arrowheads), displacing and partially encasing the urethra (U). An uninvolved fatty lymph node is seen in the left inguinal region (N).
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Figure 8.10 T3 vulval carcinoma involving vagina and rectum. (A) Transaxial, (B) coronal, and (C) sagittal T2WI showing extensive vulval carcinoma. The tumor (T) has extended through the vagina (arrows) to infiltrate the anal canal and rectum at the anorectal junction (arrowheads). With such large tumors, differentiation between those of vulval and vaginal origin can be difficult. Locating the epicenter of the lesion and review of the clinical history and examination findings are useful indicators.
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Figure 8.11 N1 vulval carcinoma. (A) Coronal T1WI and (B) transaxial T2WI showing a cystic metastasis in a right superficial inguinal lymph node (arrows). The T1WI shows that the metastatic node is not composed of fat. There are normal left inguinal lymph nodes (arrowheads).
Figure 8.12 N2c vulval carcinoma. (A) Coronal T1WI and (B) coronal T2W fat-suppressed images showing bilateral enlarged metastatic superficial inguinal lymph nodes (arrows). On the left side, there is extranodal spread (arrowheads) shown to advantage in B and a cystic area (asterisk) due to nodal necrosis.
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Figure 8.13 N2 vulval carcinoma—locally invasive tumor involving anal canal with inguinal lymph node metastases. (A) Transaxial T2WI at the level of the anal canal and (B) perineum show predominantly posterior tumor involving the anterior anal canal (arrowheads) and extending forward on to the right labia majora (arrows). On the right side, levator ani is replaced with tumor (open arrows), and the left side shows interruption of normal, low signal secondary to tumor infiltration (crossed arrows). Posteroinferiorly, the tumor shows central necrosis and local perineal invasion (T). (C) Coronal T2WI demonstrates bilateral inguinal lymph node metastases (N) with partially cystic mixed signal intensity.
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Figure 8.14 T2 N2c vulval carcinoma—inguinal lymph node metastases in tumor with urethral involvement. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI of anterior tumor with minimal involvement of the urethra inferiorly (arrows) in a patient with previous hysterectomy. Transverse imaging demonstrates bilateral inguinal lymph node metastases (N). Within the right groin, mild irregularity along the medial margin of the more laterally placed node is indicative of extranodal spread (arrowheads).
Figure 8.15 N2c M1 vulval carcinoma with inguinal and pelvic lymph node metastases. Transaxial T2WI (A, B) show a left vulval carcinoma involving the left bulbospongiosus muscle (asterisk). The isolated ipsilateral lymph node (N) has an irregular lateral margin (arrowheads) indicating extranodal spread. A left external iliac lymph node (N) is also identified in B. Nodes within the pelvis are classified as M1 in staging vulval carcinoma.
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Figure 8.16 N2 M1 vulval carcinoma with para-aortic lymph node metastases. (A, B) Coronal T1WI showing left inguinal (arrows), left external iliac (arrowheads), left common iliac (open arrowheads), and left para-aortic lymph node (asterisk) metastases.
Figure 8.17 Recurrent vulval carcinoma. (A, B) Transaxial T2WI, (C) coronal T2WI, and (D) sagittal T2WI showing recurrent vulval cancer following radiotherapy. The tumor (T) is centered on the right side of the natal cleft. It infiltrates the external anal sphincter (arrows) and vagina at the introitus (open arrowheads). Surgical treatment of this lesion would involve an extended radical vulvectomy and colonic stoma formation. Source: Image courtesy of Dr Paul Hulse, Christie Hospital. (Continued)
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Figure 8.17 (Continued )
Figure 8.18 Recurrent vulval carcinoma. (A) Sagittal, and (B, C) transaxial T2WI show local tumor recurrence (T) within the perineum, extending superficially with possible early infiltration of the external urethral orifice (arrow) and extending into the vagina (open arrow). The anatomy of this region is more clearly demonstrated on the transaxial images (B, C); B demonstrates the defect anteriorly relating to previous right hemivulvectomy (asterisk). In C, tumor (T) can be seen extending into the vaginal introitus (arrows). Patient has had previous hysterectomy.
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Figure 8.18 (Continued )
Figure 8.19 Recurrent vulval carcinoma. (A) Transaxial, (B) coronal, and (C) sagittal T2WI showing extensive recurrent vulval carcinoma, following radical vulvectomy. The vulvectomy void (asterisk) is evident in A and C. The tumor (T) has infiltrated the anus (arrows), posterior margin of the vagina (arrowheads), and the perineal aspect of the distal urethra (crossed arrow). (D) Coronal T2WI in the same patient showing a right inguinal lymph node metastasis (N), which has an irregular margin indicating extranodal extension of tumor. Source: Image courtesy of Dr Bernadette M. Carrington, Christie Hospital.
Figure 8.19 (Continued )
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Figure 8.19 (Continued )
Figure 8.20 Inguinal lymph node pitfall. (A) Coronal T1WI and (B) fat-suppressed T2WI in a patient who had a vulvectomy for vulval carcinoma a few weeks earlier. There is an enlarged right inguinal lymph node (arrows) which has a hyperintense focus in its lower pole (arrowheads) in B. This is an equivocal finding for a metastatic or hyperplastic node, although the high signal focus favors metastatic disease. On histology it was benign.
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FURTHER READING Bipat S, Fransen GA, Spijkerboer AM, et al. Is there a role for magnetic resonance imaging in the evaluation of inguinal lymph node metastases in patients with vulva carcinoma? Gynecol Oncol 2006; 103:1001–1006. One of only five papers examining the role of MR in assessing lymph nodes in vulval cancer. Grey AC, Carrington BM, Hulse PA, et al. Magnetic resonance appearance of normal inguinal nodes. Clin Radiol 2000; 55:124–130. Defines normal values for inguinal lymph node measurements on pelvic MRI. Hawnaur JM, Reynolds K, Wilson G, et al. Identification of inguinal lymph node metastases from vulval carcinoma by magnetic resonance imaging: an initial report. Clin Radiol 2002; 57:995–1000. Describes the technique and results of high-resolution MRI for staging the inguinal lymph nodes in vulval cancer. Kataoka MY, Sala E, Baldwin P, et al. The accuracy of magnetic resonance imaging in staging of vulvar cancer: a retrospective multi-center study. Gynecol Oncol 2010; 117:82–87. Contemporary review of vulval staging with MR. Does not include new FIGO staging. Retrospective data from three centers and is the largest series in the literature with 49 patients.
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NHS Executive. Vulval Cancer. In: Guidance on Commissioning Cancer Services: Improving Outcomes in Gynaecological Cancers—The Research Evidence. NHS Executive, Department of Health publication, 1999:131–133. Summary of the research evidence for current management of vulval carcinoma. Singh K, Orakwue CO, Honest H, et al. Accuracy of magnetic resonance imaging of inguinofemoral lymph nodes in vulval cancer. Int J Gynecol Cancer 2006; 16:1179–1183. Retrospective review of lymph node imaging with MRI in 39 patients. Sohaib SA, Richards PS, Ind T, et al. MR imaging of carcinoma of the vulva. Am J Roentgenol 2002; 178:373–377. Retrospective review of MR findings in 22 patients with vulval cancer. Zivanovic O, Khoury-Collado F, Abu-Rustum NR, et al. Sentinel lymph node biopsy in the management of vulval carcinoma, cervical cancer and endometrial cancer. Oncologist 2009; 14:695–705. Review of the technique of sentinel node imaging and its potential applications to gynecological tumors.
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9 Rectal cancer Mike Dobson
INTRODUCTION Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) plays an integral part in the staging of rectal cancer. The appearances on staging MR directly influence the initial management plan, which may include transanal endoscopic resection for small volume, superficial disease, or a “long course” of neoadjuvant chemotherapy prior to surgery for more advanced cases. MR is also central to the investigation of suspected recurrent pelvic disease.
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BACKGROUND INFORMATION Epidemiology Colorectal cancer is the fourth most common cancer worldwide. There are over 38,000 new cases of bowel cancer diagnosed each year in the United Kingdom, with colorectal cancer the second commonest malignancy in women and the third commonest in men. Worldwide, there were 1.23 million new cases in 2008, with the highest incidence seen in North America, Europe, and Australasia. Over 30% of colorectal cancers arise in the rectum. The U.K. National Bowel Cancer Screening Programme commenced in 2006, in which patients between the ages of 60 and 69 years are invited to send a fecal sample for occult blood testing to a regional testing center. Of approximately 50% who return a sample, 2% of cases are positive, of whom approximately 10% are shown to have colorectal cancer at colonoscopy. There has been a notable increase in the number of early cancers detected, with a commensurate reduction in the proportion of more advanced disease. Other important outcomes such as stoma requirement and emergency admission have also shown a reduced frequency. A large trial has recently demonstrated that a single flexible sigmoidoscopy at the age of 50 can reduce mortality from colorectal cancer by 43%, compared with the 15% to 20% projected for the fecal blood testing program. This approach would not only detect existing cancers but also prevent future cancer in the left hemicolon by early detection and removal of adenomas. Etiological factors for colorectal cancer include the following: l
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Diet: genetically mediated susceptibility to dietary mutagens, for example, heterocyclic amines in cooked red meats; bile acids; low dietary folate in combination with high alcohol intake. Preexisting polyps: these may be sporadic (especially villous adenomas) or are part of hereditary polyposis syndromes. The familial polyposis gene on chromosome 21 and the p53 gene on chromosome 17 have been implicated in a substantial number of sporadic carcinomas Previous medical history of ovarian, endometrial, or breast cancer
A first-degree family history of colorectal cancer or colorectal adenomas Prolonged ulcerative colitis Smoking tobacco
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Increased dietary fiber Reduced animal fat intake Supplements of vitamin D Folate and antioxidants such as vitamin E
Histopathology Most colorectal cancers are moderately well differentiated gland-forming adenocarcinomas. Less common cell types include signet ring adenocarcinoma (see “Linitis Plastica” in “Pitfalls of MRI” section), adenosquamous carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, small cell carcinoma, choriocarcinoma, and medullary cell carcinoma. Colorectal carcinoid tumors occasionally occur (more commonly in the rectum) and arise in the submucosa. Sarcomas (usually leiomyosarcoma) are rarer, comprising up to 0.3% of colorectal tumors. Genetic and immunological tumor profiling is becoming important. For example, in the context of immunotherapy targeting extracellular growth factor receptors (EGFRs), it has been shown that patients whose tumors express the so-called “wild type” of KRAS gene (a gene coding for a protein involved in signaling cell division) have a significantly higher treatment response rate than those patients whose tumors express mutant varieties of the gene.
Patterns of Tumor Spread Rectal cancers arise in the mucosa, usually in a preexisting adenomatous polyp. Tumors advance radially through the layers of the bowel wall; longitudinal spread is uncommon. Following breach of the bowel wall, spread occurs directly into the mesorectum (see the following text) and then progressively into adjacent pelvic structures. Locoregional lymphatic spread includes: mesorectal, presacral, superior, middle and inferior rectal, sigmoid and inferior mesenteric, and internal iliac sites. More advanced, nonregional nodes include the external iliac and paraaortic nodes and extraabdominal sites and these are denoted as metastases. Hematogenous spread is apparent in up to 15% of patients at presentation and occurs most commonly to the liver by the portal venous route and to the lungs via the systemic circulation. Spread to the lungs is more common from tumors of the lower rectum because of systemic drainage (middle and inferior rectal veins) compared with the upper
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TNM Staging Table (Table 9.1) Table 9.1 TNM System for Staging Rectal Cancer (2010) Primary tumor (T) TX Cannot assess primary tumour T0 No evidence of primary tumor Tis Carcinoma in situ (intraepithelial or invasion of the lamina propria) T1 Tumor invades the submucosa T2 Tumor invades the muscularis propria T3 Tumor invades through muscularis propria into the subserosa, or into the nonperitonealized perirectal tissues T4a Tumor penetrates to the surface of the visceral peritoneum T4b Tumor directly invades or is adherent to other organs or structures Regional lymph nodes (N) NX Cannot assess regional nodes N0 No regional lymph node metastasis N1 Metastasis in 1–3 regional nodes: N1a Metastasis in one regional node N1b Metastasis in 2–3 regional nodes N1c Tumor deposit(s) in the subserosa, mesentery or nonperitonealized perirectal tissues, without regional lymph node metastasis N2 Metastasis in 4 or more regional nodes N2a Metastasis in 4–6 regional nodes N2b Metastasis in 7 or more regional nodes Distant metastasis (M) M0 No distant metastasis M1 Distant metastasis: M1a Metastasis confined to one organ (e.g., lung, liver, ovary or nonregional lymph node) M1b Metastasis in more than one site/organ or the peritoneum
rectum, which drains into the portal system by the superior rectal vein. Metastases to the brain and skeleton occur less commonly. Discrete foci of mesorectal tumor, clearly separate from the primary lesion, in the absence of lymph node tissue, are termed “satellite nodules.” They may be due to extramural vascular infiltration, replaced lymph nodes or noncontiguous primary tumor spread and should be quantified as tumor deposits in the pathological dataset as prognostic indicators. The prefix “p” is used when the above staging is applied to the histological specimen, with further addition of the prefix “y” if the patient has had neoadjuvant chemo/radiotherapy. Adequate pathological lymph node staging requires that the pathologist examines at least 10 to 14 lymph nodes for a total mesorectal excision (TME) specimen in the absence of neoadjuvant therapy.
Prognostic Indicators The features that have been shown to correlate with an adverse prognosis include the following: l
Comparison Table of Dukes’ and TNM Systems (Table 9.2) Table 9.2 Combined Modified Dukes’ and TNM Systems for Staging Rectal Cancer TNM Tis T1, T2 T3, T4 Any T Any T a
Modified Dukes’ N0 N0 N0 N1, N2 Any N
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Dukes’ C stage is divided into C1 and C2. C1 indicates peritumoral lymph node infiltration, but not up to the point of surgical ligation. C2 indicates nodal involvement at the highest point of ligation and has a significantly worse prognosis.
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Increasing tumor stage. Patients with tumor confined to the bowel wall have an approximately 80% five-year survival, falling to approximately 60% if there is transmural disease without lymph node involvement. It has been stated that it is important to subdivide T3 disease according to the radial diameter of extramural infiltration. This is because infiltration of 5 mm or greater carries a significantly worse prognosis than lesser degrees of extramural extension. Furthermore, infiltration of less than 2 mm carries a similar prognosis to stage T2 disease. Some authors suggest that there may, therefore, be a benefit in modifying the T3 stage to reflect varying depths of extramural tumor penetration. Five-year survival falls as low as 12% where there is lymph node involvement up to the point of surgical ligation (Dukes’ C2) and is less than 10% overall for M1 disease, although resection of limited liver or lung metastasis does carry a very significant survival advantage. Tumor involving the circumferential resection margin is associated with increased risk of local recurrence and a five-year survival of 15%. High tumor grade. KRAS gene mutation. Perineural, vascular, or lymphatic invasion. Increasing number of peritumoral deposits. Significant residual tumor after neoadjuvant therapy as graded histologically is an unfavorable prognostic factor,
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as opposed to complete or near complete histological remission which is likely to be favorable. Mucinous histology. Infiltrative (as opposed to well-defined) margin of extramural spread. Linitis plastica. Age below 40 years at presentation.
Treatment Chemotherapy There is clear evidence of a survival benefit for postoperative chemotherapy in patients with N1 or N2 (Dukes C) tumors of the colon, although there is, as yet, no definite evidence that this advantage extends to patients with rectal cancer, especially if they have already had neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy. Research is ongoing in this regard. However, both patient groups have a similar beneficial response to chemotherapy in the presence of metastatic disease. Radiotherapy Short-course (5 days) neoadjuvant (preoperative) radiotherapy has been shown to reduce the rate of local recurrence for rectal cancer even if the patient has a TME performed by an experienced surgeon. Concern has been expressed, however, that treating all patients with early T3 or lesser stage disease may lead to unnecessary irradiation for a large number of patients. Research is ongoing into the development of evidence-based, stage-related therapeutic protocols. Patients with more advanced mesorectal infiltration or evidence of mesorectal lymph node involvement, especially if within 1 mm of the mesorectal fascia on MRI, are generally referred for a long course (typically 5 weeks) of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy. Such treatment significantly reduces the chances of local disease recurrence. French studies dating back to the 1950s have shown a 90% cure rate for early, lymph node negative rectal cancer treated with “contact” intraluminal brachytherapy alone. Encouraging results have also been reported for patients with T2 N0 tumors treated with preoperative contact brachytherapy and external beam radiotherapy followed by surgery. There may also be scope for treating frail patients who have T3 tumors with a combination of contact brachytherapy and external beam radiotherapy alone. Audit of recent experience with brachytherapy is ongoing to standardize protocols. The development of less invasive treatments with reduced associated morbidity is important, as the bowel cancer screening program is yielding a population with a larger proportion of early rectal cancers—29% of screening detected tumors are T stage 1 compared with 4% for patients presenting symptomatically. Surgery Best surgical practice for rectal cancer is TME—removal of the tumor en bloc with the surrounding mesorectum invested in the visceral mesorectal fascia. The mesorectum comprises the perirectal fat, containing the rectal vessels, extending from the region of the aortic bifurcation to the intersphincteric groove. The plane of resection lies between the inner (visceral) and outer (parietal) layers of the mesorectal fascia. Radial growth of tumor (or nodal disease) close to or into this plane greatly increases the risk of a positive circumferential resection margin at histology with associated increased risk of local recurrence,
and a reduced five-year survival. A positive circumferential tumor margin is defined as tumor involving or lying within 1 mm of the resected visceral mesorectal fascia. Patients with early rectal cancer (T1/2 N0 M0) whose tumors are mobile and less than 4 cm in size may be offered transanal resection, or, where the facility and expertise are available, transanal endoscopic microsurgery (TEM), with encouraging results. Accurate staging is crucial here to avoid under treatment. Improving outcomes guidance (IOG) recommends that the staging of such cases includes transanal ultrasound, which some studies have shown to be more accurate than MRI in the “T” staging of early rectal cancers.
MRI OF RECTAL CANCER Technique A pelvic phased array coil is required for images of suitable quality. Endorectal coils are not routinely required and may have inherent problems (see later in the chapter). Smooth muscle relaxants improve image quality, though not necessarily staging accuracy. Similarly, intravenous contrast enhancement and endorectal contrast agents may increase the conspicuity of the tumor though do not influence tumor staging. The tumor is localized using a T2-weighted turbo (or fast) spin echo (TSE or FSE) sequence in the sagittal plane. The presence of an accurate record of the endoscopic findings is very helpful at this stage of the examination. High-resolution (3 mm) T2-weighted images are then acquired perpendicular and parallel to the tumor to allow assessment of the circumferential extent of the lesion. T2-weighted images are also useful for assessing lymph node morphology. Lymph node heterogeneity and an irregular margin strongly suggest malignant infiltration. T1-weighted images may be useful for demonstrating benign fatty change within a lymph node and are also highly sensitive for identification of pelvic bone metastases. There is increasing evidence that diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) increases the accuracy of tumor identification and may be useful in assessing the response of tumor to therapy. Rectal tumors demonstrate restricted diffusion and an apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) which is significantly lower than benign tissues.
Current Indications Preoperative primary tumor staging of rectal cancer with pelvic phased array coil MRI is now standard practice. MR accurately defines earlier stages of disease, preventing unnecessary use of neoadjuvant radiotherapy in these patients. MR also accurately determines the proximity of tumor to the mesorectal fascia, allowing identification of those patients who may benefit from neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy. Restaging MRI is indicated post long-course chemoradiotherapy to assess the degree of tumor response, and, where appropriate, facilitate surgical planning. MRI is also essential in evaluating suspected pelvic disease recurrence and for characterizing and quantifying liver metastases.
Staging Accuracy Staging accuracy of up to 82% has been reported for local rectal cancer staging. This, however, takes into account studies that used inherently low-resolution body coil techniques. One study quoted 100% correlation with histological staging using a pelvic phased array coil and a high-resolution technique, although
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this has not been reproduced in larger studies. Local staging accuracy of 84% has been quoted for endorectal coil techniques. However, acquisition of an image plane perpendicular to the tumor may not always be possible using endorectal MRI and technical difficulties may also arise with high rectal tumors or a tightly stenotic lesion. Near-field flaring may also occur with endorectal techniques, although most manufacturers have developed software to overcome this problem. Lymph node evaluation remains a challenge. Size criteria are notoriously inaccurate. The use of morphological criteria (signal heterogeneity and/or irregular lymph node margin) can achieve sensitivity and specificity of 85% and 97%, respectively, although these figures are not uniformly reproducible. MRI enhanced with ultrasmall paramagnetic iron oxide (USPIO) contrast agents has a reported sensitivity and specificity of 93% and 97% for other pelvic cancers, although this technique has yet to gain widespread popularity in the United Kingdom for rectal cancer staging. Initial reports suggest that DWI in combination with USPIO may be very accurate for lymph node evaluation, although this is still under evaluation and currently there is no availability of USPIOs. MRI, especially with liver-specific contrast agents, has been shown to be superior to CT for the identification and characterization of malignant liver lesions, in most reports comparing these techniques. This is important for patients with limited liver metastases who are being considered for hepatic metastatic resection, to ensure an accurate quantification of liver disease.
Imaging Features Primary Tumor There are five layers of the normal rectal wall, namely: mucosa (epithelium and lamina propria), muscularis mucosae, submucosa, muscularis propria (circular muscle and longitudinal muscle) and serosa/perirectal fat. Although all five layers may be seen on high-resolution T2WI, this is uncommon. In most cases, the mucosa and submucosa are seen as a single layer of high signal deep to the low signal muscularis propria. The normal rectal wall should be no more than 6 mm thick in the distended state, although this is variable and unreliable. Rectal tumors are usually of intermediate intensity compared with the muscularis propria of the bowel wall on T2WI. Mucinous tumors return a high signal due to their fluid content. Important features to be assessed are as follows: l l l l
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Precise tumor location Approximate tumor length T stage Distance of the caudal aspect of the tumor from the dentate line Relation to the peritoneal reflection Radial depth of extramural tumor infiltration Proximity of tumor to the mesorectal fascia Proximity of tumor to the anal sphincter Presence and characterization of mesorectal nodes and perirectal tumor deposits and their proximity to the mesorectal fascia Extramural vascular infiltration
Lymph Node Disease Rectal cancer spreads initially to lymph nodes in the mesorectum, extending into the more proximal rectal mesentery, inter-
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nal iliac chain, and external and paraaortic groups with more progressive disease. In common with other primary tumors, enlarged nodes in the presence of rectal cancer may be simply inflammatory and nonenlarged nodes may contain tumor. Pointers toward malignancy include an overtly infiltrative or irregular gland margin, nodal necrosis, and signal intensity similar to the primary tumor (such as high signal nodes infiltrated by mucinous tumor). These features are best assessed on high-resolution T2-weighted sequences. Proximity of suspicious nodes to the mesorectal fascia should be noted as this may compromise the surgical plane and the patient may benefit from neoadjuvant radiotherapy. Hematogenous Spread MR is highly accurate at characterizing liver lesions, the commonest site of distant metastases, which are usually discovered on staging CT. Small simple cysts are usually readily definable as well demarcated high-signal lesions on T2W images. Hemangiomas are similarly hyperintense on T2W images with a long TE (>160 ms) (unlike metastases which are of lower signal) and have a characteristic pattern of centripetal, nodular enhancement. A large array of liver specific contrast agents is available to further improve lesion quantification and characterization. With most gadolinium-based agents, metastases typically demonstrate inhomogeneous enhancement, with central and/or peripheral “washout” relating to neovascularity. Delayed T1W images, using agents with significant hepatocyte 1 uptake (e.g., Primovist —Gd EOB-DTPA, Bayer Pharmaceuticals, U.S.) demonstrate metastases as foci of low signal contrasted against the hyperintense, enhanced hepatic parenchyma. USPIO particle agents are highly accurate at evaluating liver lesions, although they do have significant side effects. These agents are taken up by the hepatic reticuloendothelial system and cause marked parenchymal hypointensity on T2*W images. This contrasts against hyperintense metastases which do not demonstrate USPIO uptake. DWI is also very sensitive and specific in the evaluation of suspected spread of disease to the liver. MRI is also extremely useful in evaluating metastatic disease in the skeleton and central nervous system, which occurs less commonly. CT is the modality of choice for evaluating lung metastases. Synchronous Tumors There may be synchronous tumors in the rectum or colon. Careful review of the sagittal MR image should exclude the former, though the patient will also require formal colonic evaluation by colonoscopy (“virtual” or fiber-optic) or barium enema.
Posttreatment Appearances Surgery Both anterior resection TME and abdominoperineal resection (APR) TME may produce presacral and perirectal fibrotic change. This is usually more pronounced following an APR. Also, following APR, there may be a presacral “pseudomass” on CT and T1WI due to the uterus, prostate, or seminal vesicles occupying the void in the rectal bed. This should be readily discernible on T2WI. Radiotherapy The effects of rectal irradiation depend on the total radiation dose and will be more pronounced following a long (5 weeks)
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course of treatment compared with the shorter five-day regime. In the acute and subacute posttreatment phases (up to 12 months post therapy), changes on MRI reflect cell death and inflammation. Hence, there may be visceral mural thickening, increased mucosal and submucosal signal on T2WI, and mucosal enhancement with intravenous contrast agents. The chronic effects of radiotherapy reflect fibrosis, and there may still be visceral mural thickening, though this will usually return low signal on T1WI and T2WI and show little or no intravenous contrast enhancement. However, fibrosis can remain of intermediate signal intensity for an indefinite period. Other changes include perirectal fascial and peritoneal thickening, inflammation, and atrophy of adjacent pelvic muscles and fatty marrow change (high signal on T1WI) in irradiated bone. More severe changes may include strictures of bowel and fistulation (e.g., rectovaginal or rectovesical). In addition, atrophic change in the skeleton may lead to insufficiency fractures of the sacral ala and pubic bones. These are often associated with florid bone marrow edema and can be distinguished from bone metastases by visualization of a linear, low signal fracture line, of typical distribution, on the T1WI. Recurrent Disease Pelvic recurrence has been reported in up to 50% of patients with rectal cancer, although following TME with negative circumferential resection margins, this figure falls to less than 10%. Establishing the diagnosis of recurrent disease using imaging can be difficult. Recurrent tumor usually manifests as a mass returning intermediate signal intensity on T2WI compared with muscle. However, radiation fibrosis may also return intermediate signal especially within the first two years following irradiation. In addition, fibrotic tissue and desmoplastic foci of tumors can both return low signal on T1WI and T2WI. Dynamic intravenous contrast-enhanced MRI may add to the specificity of diagnosing recurrent disease. DWI is also showing encouraging results in discriminating recurrent tumor from fibrosis, although IOG recommends PET-CT imaging where there is any uncertainty over the status of possible local disease recurrence. PET-CT is also indicated prior to embarking on resection of pelvic recurrence or limited metastatic disease. This is to ensure as accurately as possible that there is no further occult metastasis which may render such major surgery futile. It is important to have a detailed surgical history and to review the PET-CT and MR images together as sepsis, recent postsurgical change and tumor may all cause avid 18FDG uptake on a PETCT scan. MRI is accurate in assessing the extent of proven, recurrent pelvic tumor and can significantly aid the planning of further “salvage” surgery.
Pitfalls of MRI Tumor Identification on the Planning T2-Weighted Sagittal View This may be difficult, though it is crucial to further imaging. Knowledge of the tumor site at sigmoidoscopy is very important and should be included in the clinical information. Tumor is usually of intermediate signal intensity relative to the muscularis propria and flatus/feces. At the site of tumor, there is often nonvisualization of the different layers of the rectal wall, which is thickened, except in the case of T1 lesions. Other useful pointers may be the presence of blood vessels entering
the tumor or, occasionally, bowel wall retraction at the tumor site. Smooth muscle relaxants, DWI, and intravenous contrast enhancement may increase tumor conspicuity, but, with experience, are seldom required for simple tumor identification. Overstaging due to Peritumoral Fibrosis This appears as linear, low signal stranding in the mesorectal fat, as opposed to tumor, which has a nodular interface with the mesorectum, and usually returns intermediate signal. Overstaging due to Partial Volume Artifact This should be minimized by meticulous attention to detail when planning the high-resolution sequence perpendicular to the tumor. Adjacent Visceral Infiltration This is clear evidence of the primary tumor extending into the adjacent viscera. Contiguity of the tumor with an adjacent organ does not necessarily indicate invasion and peritumoral fibrosis or inflammation may cause overstaging in these cases. Nodal Disease Standard MRI remains fairly inaccurate in the assessment of mesorectal lymph node metastasis, although there are some useful discriminating features such as round shape, irregular margin, or increased signal intensity on T2WI indicating central nodal necrosis or a mucinous tumor deposit. Increased accuracy is possible with the use of USPIO lymph node contrast agents. The accuracy of DWI alone or in combination with USPIO agents is under review. Recurrent Disease Radiation effect and/or surgical changes may give rise to an intermediate signal presacral mass, mimicking tumor recurrence. Recurrent disease may return low signal due to desmoplasia, mimicking simple fibrosis. PET-CT is recommended if there is diagnostic uncertainty, although this may occasionally yield a false positive result if there is pelvic sepsis. DWI may prove useful in this situation, though it is still under evaluation. Intussuscepted Tumor This makes it difficult to T stage the tumor precisely as the interface with adjacent fat is not evident. However, an intussuscepted tumor cannot be fixed and should be evident on the sagittal view. The key feature on the perpendicular image is the presence of several layers of muscularis propria. Hemorrhoids When hemorrhoids are extensive and internal, there is thickening of the lower rectal submucosa, which may return high or intermediate signal. This may cause some difficulty when planning the off-axis MR sequences. A review of the endoscopic detail is helpful in regard to the level of the tumor and the presence of hemorrhoids. Also, despite the presence of quite marked mucosal thickening, the mucosa remains intact in patients with hemorrhoids, as opposed to the mucosal disruption caused by tumor. Linitis Plastica This is a rare form of rectal cancer where malignant “signet ring” cells or undifferentiated carcinoma diffusely infiltrate the submucosa and muscularis propria, with relative sparing of the mucosa. This may be a primary rectal tumor or may be
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secondary to other pelvic cancers such as prostate, cervix, or bladder. On T1WI, there is marked thickening of the rectal wall and mesorectal fascia. On T2WI, there may be a ring pattern in the rectal wall due to a combination of tumor infiltration and fibrosis around intact layers of the muscularis propria. Early
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recognition is important as it may guide the physician to perform deep biopsies (if the mucosa is spared). Also, because the prognosis is very poor, the patient may be spared unnecessary major surgery.
Figure 9.1 Schematic diagram of the T-staging of rectal cancer.
Figure 9.2 Normal rectum.(A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI of normal rectum. Note the signal void due to gas in the rectal lumen (R), the high signal combination of mucosa and submucosa (arrowheads) and the low signal muscularis propria (arrows). Intermediate signal endometrial tumor (asterisk). Abbreviations: C, cervix; SP, symphysis pubis.
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Figure 9.3 Lateral view of a surgical specimen from an abdominoperineal TME. Note the peritoneal reflection (arrowheads) and the pouch of Douglas (asterisk), the uterus having been removed. Peritoneum covers the anterior and lateral aspects of the upper two thirds of the rectum. The lower third of rectum is circumferentially invested by mesorectal fascia, the visceral surface of which (arrow) invests the surgical specimen. Note the anus (A) and the ischioanal fossa fat (IAF).
Figure 9.4 T1 rectal cancer. Transaxial T2WI of the mid-third of rectum. Note the intact muscularis propria (arrow). The tumor (T) can be distinguished from fecal residue by the vessel entering the mass (arrowheads). Abbreviations: B, bladder; S, sacrum.
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Figure 9.5 T2 rectal cancer. T2WI perpendicular to an upper rectal tumor (T). Note the muscularis propria (arrow), which is focally infiltrated (asterisk) by the tumor. Note the peritoneal reflection (curved arrow) and piecemeal depiction of the mesorectal fascia (arrowheads). Right iliopsoas bursa (open arrow). Abbreviation: B, bladder.
Figure 9.6 T3 mid-third rectal cancer—margin uninvolved. (A) Sagittal and (B) T2WI perpendicular to a posterior, mid-third rectal tumor (T). Note the axis planned for the subsequent high-resolution off-axis sequence (line) in A. There is a broad front of infiltration into the mesorectal fat (arrowheads) making this a T3 lesion, although the mesorectal fascia (circumferential resection margin) is well clear (arrows) in B. Note the peritoneal reflection anteriorly (open arrows) in B, rectal lumen (L) obturator internus muscle (O), levator ani (curved arrow) in A. Abbreviations: B, bladder; PG, prostate gland; PS, pubic symphysis.
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Figure 9.7 T3 lower rectal cancer—margin involved. T2WI perpendicular to a tumor (T) of the anterior and right lateral rectal wall. The tumor demonstrates central ulceration (U) and is contiguous anteriorly with the retroprostatic or Denonvillier’s fascia (arrows) making this T-stage 3 with an involved anterior margin. This patient would benefit from a long course of preoperative radiotherapy to reduce the risk of a positive anterior resection margin. Note how little space there is between the rectal wall and the mesorectal fascia anteriorly compared with laterally, making anterior tumors at particular risk for resection margin involvement. Mesorectal fascia (arrowheads). Abbreviations: B, bladder; L, rectal lumen; O, obturator internus muscle; PCZ, hypertrophied prostate central zone.
Figure 9.8 T3 mucinous lower rectal cancer. (A) Sagittal and (B) T2WI perpendicular to a characteristically high signal mucinous tumor (asterisk) extending from the lower rectum into the upper part of the anus (A). There is focal extension (arrow) in B through the muscularis propria (curved arrows) into the lower left mesorectum/upper left intersphincteric plane, medial to the distal part of the levator ani muscle (arrowheads). Because of the narrow confines of the mesorectal space at this level, T3 tumors of the lower rectum are treated with longcourse chemoradiotherapy to reduce the risk of a positive surgical margin. Abbreviations: B, bladder; IAF, left ischioanal fossa.
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Figure 9.9 T3 mid-rectal cancer with mesorectal involvement. T2WI perpendicular to an extensive T3 mid-rectal tumor (T). There is a broad front of nodular tumor extending into the right side of the mesorectum with a satellite tumor nodule (arrow) infiltrating the right mesorectal fascia. This nodule may in fact reflect an infiltrated lymph node or discrete tumor deposit. The patient will require a long course of neoadjuvant radiotherapy to reduce the risk of a positive lateral resection margin. Note the normal mesorectal fascia elsewhere (arrowheads). An infiltrative tumor edge such as this carries a poorer prognosis than tumors with a better-defined margin such as in Figure 9.6. Abbreviations: B, bladder; O, obturator internus muscle; PCZ, prostate central zone.
Figure 9.10 T3 rectal cancer with extramural venous infiltration (EMVI). T2WI perpendicular to a mid third rectal tumor (T). Intact muscle is shown virtually around the tumor (closed arrowheads), though there is histologically proven extramural venous infiltration on the left side (open arrowheads) making this a stage T3 tumor. The venous infiltration causes tubular bulging of the involved vessel. Abbreviations: B, bladder; C, coccyx; O, obturator internus muscle; P, piriformis muscle; SV, right seminal vesicle.
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Figure 9.11 T3 rectal cancer contrasted against peritumoral fibrosis. (A) Sagittal T2WI planning image and (B) T2WI perpendicular to an upper and mid-third rectal tumor (T). Note focal infiltration dorsally into the mesorectum (arrowheads). There is quite extensive fine stranding (crossed arrows) extending into the dorsal mesorectal fat. This has been shown to represent peritumoral fibrotic change. Additionally, however, there is a nodular front of infiltrative tumor from the right and left walls (curved arrows) making this a stage T3 lesion. Note the anterior peritoneal reflection (straight arrows) and the mesorectal fascia (open arrows), which are not infiltrated. Levator ani muscle (curved black arrow) A. Abbreviations: AC, anal canal; B, bladder; P, piriformis muscle; PCZ, prostate central zone; PPZ, prostate peripheral zone; S, sacrum; SV, seminal vesicle.
Figure 9.12 T4a mid- and upper rectal cancer with peritoneal infiltration. (A) Sagittal T2WI through an extensive mid- and upper third rectal tumor (T) and (B) T2WI perpendicular to the mid-part of the tumor. The peritoneal reflection (arrowheads) is thickened with focal nodular peritoneal deposits (arrows) making this a stage T4a lesion. Note the enlarged mesorectal nodes (asterisk). Abbreviations: AC, anal canal; B, bladder; O, left obturator internus muscle; PG, prostate gland; SP, symphysis pubis.
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Figure 9.13 T4b lower rectal cancer infiltrating vagina. T2WI perpendicular to the long axis of a tumor (T) of the left side of lower rectum just above the anorectal junction. Tumor extends anteriorly to infiltrate the left posterior vaginal wall where the muscle layer is destroyed (arrows). Note the intact, low-signal posterior vaginal muscle on the right (arrowheads). This is therefore a T4b lesion. There is a broad base of contiguity with the left levator ani muscle (curved arrows), which was also infiltrated. Abbreviations: BN, bladder neck; IAF, ischioanal fossa; SPR, right superior pubic ramus.
Figure 9.14 T3/T4 lower rectal cancer abutting right levator ani muscle. Coronal T2WI of a large lower rectal tumor (T) that infiltrates through the right rectal wall (arrowheads) and is contiguous with the right levator ani muscle (curved arrow) that, however, retains its normal morphology and is not infiltrated. Adhesion to this structure, however, cannot be excluded. Left levator ani muscle (arrow). Abbreviation: IAF, left ischioanal fossa.
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Figure 9.15 T4b lower rectal cancer infiltrating levator ani muscle. Coronal T2WI showing a large lower rectal tumor (T) that clearly infiltrates the right levator ani muscle (curved arrow). Left levator ani muscle (straight arrow). Abbreviation: IAF, left ischioanal fossa.
Figure 9.16 T4b mucinous lower rectal cancer infiltrating the anus and vagina. (A) Sagittal and (B) T2WI perpendicular to the long axis of a large, mucinous lower rectal tumor (T) The tumor extends anteriorly into the vaginal lumen (long arrow) and, at introital level, extends into the left paravulval subcutaneous fat (curved arrows). Tumor abuts, but does not infiltrate the urethra (U) or levator ani muscle (short, open arrows). The external anal sphincter is diffusely attenuated with patchy focal infiltration (arrowheads). Inferior pubic rami (asterisk). Abbreviations: B, bladder; C, coccyx; IAF, left ischioanal fossa; SP, symphysis pubis.
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Figure 9.17 T4b mid-rectal cancer infiltrating a left sacral foramen and the posterior bladder wall. T2WI perpendicular to the long axis of a mucinous mid-rectal tumor (T). Note posterior extension into a lower left sacral foramen (curved arrow). Anteriorly, the tumor is contiguous with the posterior bladder wall (straight arrows), infiltrating the peritoneal reflection (arrowheads). There is gas in the bladder (asterisk) indicating rectovesical fistulation. Abbreviation: OIM, obturator internus muscle.
Figure 9.18 T4 lower rectal cancer infiltrating the prostate gland. (A) Transaxial T2WI demonstrating a large, ulcerating, anterior lower rectal tumor (T) extending into the prostate gland (P). Note the anterior displacement of the intraprostatic urinary catheter (curved arrow). There is tumor extension to the obturator internus muscle anteriorly (arrow). (B) DWI sequence (b-value 1000), the tumor returns high signal (asterisk), in keeping with restricted diffusion of water. (C) ADC Map. The lesion has a low ADC, with resultant low signal (arrows). Abbreviations: ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; U, tumor ulceration. (Continued)
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Figure 9.18 (Continued )
Figure 9.19 Enlarged benign mesorectal lymph node. Transaxial T2WI through the mid-rectum (R) showing an enlarged left mesorectal lymph node (arrow). The node is homogeneous and has a smooth margin. This was benign on histology. Abbreviations: B, bladder; S, sacrum.
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Figure 9.20 N1 rectal cancer. T2 image perpendicular to the mesorectum in a patient with a mucinous rectal primary tumor (T). This demonstrates a high signal, enlarged mesorectal lymph node (curved arrow), the high signal mucinous change pathognomonic of nodal involvement when the primary lesion is mucinous. Such high signal change may persist within the primary lesion and lymph nodes, post chemo or radiotherapy, in which setting, such an appearance may simply represent residual, inert mucin, rather than residual tumour. Abbreviation: B, bladder.
Figure 9.21 N2 rectal cancer. Transaxial T2WI showing a leftsided mid rectal tumor (T). The muscularis propria (curved arrow) is poorly defined though there is no overt mesorectal infiltration. There are enlarged nodes in the left side of the mesorectum and right internal iliac territory (asterisk). The right internal iliac node demonstrates heterogeneous signal intensity similar to the tumor and both nodes demonstrate an irregular margin (arrowheads), both signs highly suggestive of lymph node infiltration with tumor, which was subsequently proven. Several other infiltrated mesorectal nodes were evident at final histology. Abbreviations: B, bladder; SV, right seminal vesicle.
Figure 9.22 Advanced local lymph node metastasis. Transaxial T1WI showing multiple enlarged lymph nodes (arrowheads) in the upper mesorectum in the distribution of the superior rectal vessels. Note the T3 rectal tumor (T), sacrum (S) and piriformis muscle (P).
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Figure 9.23 Intussuscepted tumor. (A) Sagittal and (B) T2WI perpendicular to an intussuscepted mid-rectal tumor (T). This was pathological stage T2 disease though the intussusception makes it very difficult to accurately define the stage on MRI. Note the multiple layers of muscularis propria (arrowheads) and intussuscepted mesorectal fat (asterisk). Abbreviations: AC, anal canal; B, bladder; C, coccyx; S, sacrum; Ur, urethra.
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Figure 9.24 Linitis plastica of the lower rectum. (A) Coronal T2WI parallel to and (B) T2WI perpendicular to the lower rectum. In A, there is mural thickening with a stratified appearance, and in B, a concentric mural ring pattern (arrowheads). There is a superficial resemblance to the intussusception shown in Figure 9.23. However, in this case, the ring pattern is due to undifferentiated tumor infiltrating between the different layers of the rectal wall, with the muscularis propria remaining essentially intact (MP). Also, a florid desmoplastic response causes low signal in the submucosa (SM). Levator ani muscle (arrows). Rectal lumen (asterisk). Abbreviations: B, bladder; IAF, ischioanal fossa; O, obturator internus muscle; P, piriformis muscle; S, sacrum.
Figure 9.25 Appearances following APR in males. (A) Sagittal, (B, C) transaxial T2WI in a male following APR. The bladder (B), prostate (P), and seminal vesicles (asterisk) prolapse into the pelvic void left by the excised rectum. A fibrotic band (arrows) binds the prostate and seminal vesicles to the pelvic floor. In A, note the high signal of the fatty marrow of the lower sacrococcygeal segments following radiotherapy (X) and the postsurgical changes in the anterior abdominal wall (S). The small area of high signal in the prostate (curved arrow) is secondary to needle biopsy. Source: Images courtesy of Dr. B M Carrington, Christie Hospital. (Continued)
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Figure 9.25 (Continued )
Figure 9.26 Appearances following APR in females. (A) Sagittal T2WI in a female following APR and (B, C) Transaxial T2WI in a different female following hysterectomy and APR. The bladder (B), uterus (U), and vagina (asterisk) prolapse into the void left by the excised rectum. A fibrotic band (arrows) binds the vagina and cervix in A and the vagina and bladder in B and C to the pelvic floor. Note the posterior angulation of the urethra (Ur) in A. Source: Images courtesy of Dr B M Carrington, Christie Hospital.
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Figure 9.26 (Continued )
Figure 9.27 Appearances following radiotherapy. (A) Sagittal T2WI in a female with an upper rectal tumor (T). Note the focus of extramural vascular invasion (EMVI) (arrowhead). (B) Sagittal T2WI in the same patient three months post long-course chemoradiotherapy. There is low-signal fibrotic change and structuring of the rectal wall at the level of the tumor (open curved arrow) with regression and fibrotic change at the site of EMVI. In the lower rectum, there is acute inflammatory postirradiation change, with high-signal change and thickening of the submucosa (asterisk). Note that the low signal mucosa remains intact (curved arrows). In addition, there is characteristic edema and stranding in the dorsal mesorectal fat (open arrowheads). (C) T2WI perpendicular to the lower rectum showing the same acute inflammatory change in the rectum. In addition, there is similar high-signal submucosal thickening within an anterior pelvic small bowel loop (open straight arrows). This loop would have been unavoidably within the treatment radiotherapy field. (D) Coronal T2WI in a different female previously treated with pelvic radiotherapy for cervical cancer, who has chronic radiation cystitis. There is thickening of the mucosa (arrowheads) and the high-signal submucosa (asterisk). A layer of low-signal muscle (arrows) is seen within the thickened bladder wall. Note the low signal fibrosis within a residual left pelvic sidewall nodal mass (curved arrows). Urethra (U). (E) Transaxial T1WI of the mid-pelvis in a patient with insufficiency fractures due to previous pelvic radiotherapy for cervical cancer. Note the low-signal edema in the sacral ala (asterisk) adjacent to low-signal fracture lines (arrows), characteristically running parallel to the sacroiliac joints (arrowheads), and the high-signal fatty marrow in the iliac bones (IL). (F) Sagittal T2WI demonstrating a large fistula (arrowheads) between the anterior wall of a rectal stump (RS) and the posterior vaginal wall (curved arrows) in a patient who had a previous Hartman’s procedure and radiotherapy for advanced rectosigmoid cancer. Note the intact anterior vaginal wall (arrows). Bladder (B). Abbreviations: B, bladder; O, obturator internus muscle; P, pyriformis muscle; S, Sacrum; SPR, superior pubic ramus; Ut, uterus. (Continued)
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Figure 9.27 (Continued )
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Figure 9.28 Recurrent rectal tumor. T2WI perpendicular to the lower rectum. This patient previously had an anterior lower third rectal tumor resected, and there was clinical evidence of recurrent disease at the anastomotic site. Repeated biopsies through the left wall of the rectum revealed fibrotic tissue only, which characteristically returns low signal on T2-weighted imaging as shown here (F). This image, however, also shows an intermediate signal mass more anteriorly (asterisk) extending into the prostate gland (P) which is much more suggestive of recurrent tumor. This allowed accurate CT-guided biopsy, which confirmed the diagnosis of recurrent disease. Abbreviations: B, bladder; C, coccyx; L, rectal lumen; O, right obturator internus muscle.
Figure 9.29 Recurrent rectal cancer following Hartman’s procedure. (A) Sagittal T2WI demonstrating nodular, low to intermediate signal intensity mucosal tumor (arrowheads) within the rectal stump (S), after a previous emergency Hartman’s procedure for an obstructing rectosigmoid cancer. (B) Sagittal T2WI post radiotherapy, showing shrinkage of the rectal stump. Much of the tumor has resolved, apart from some intermediate signal tissue at the cranial end of the stump (closed arrows) which was biopsy-proven residual disease. (C) Sagittal T2WI three months following resection of the rectal stump. There is some nonspecific intermediate signal tissue within the wall of the anorectal bed (curved arrows) suspicious for tumor. (D) Avid FDG uptake (open arrows) within the anorectal bed reinforced the suspicion of residual disease, which was confirmed by progression on follow-up scans. Abbreviations: B, bladder; P, prostate; SPR, superior pubic ramus. (Continued)
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Figure 9.29 (Continued )
Figure 9.30 Recurrent rectal cancer following previous anterior resection. (A) Transaxial T2WI, (B) DWI (b-value 1000) images, and (C) ADC map showing extensive tumor recurrence infiltrating the parietal mesorectal fascia, presacral space, and posterior pelvic sidewalls in a male patient who had a previous anterior resection TME. Typically, the tumor returns intermediate signal intensity on the T2WI (arrows). The periphery of each tumor focus also returns high signal on the DWI (arrowheads), in keeping with restricted water diffusion. As expected, these areas are depicted as low-signal foci on the ADC map (curved arrows). Left seminal vesicle (asterisk). Abbreviations: ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; B, bladder; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; S, sacrum.
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Figure 9.30 (Continued )
Figure 9.31 Recurrent mucinous tumor involving the cervix and left pelvic sidewall. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI in a patient who had a previous anterior resection for mucinous rectal cancer. There is a high-signal mass of recurrent mucinous tumor (asterisk) infiltrating the posterior lip of the uterine cervix (C). The recurrent tumor extends from the cervix, to infiltrate the internal iliac territory of the left pelvic side wall (arrows) in B. Levator ani muscle (arrowheads). Abbreviations: B, bladder; R, rectal lumen; S, sacrum.
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Figure 9.32 Hemorrhoids. (A) Sagittal T2WI in a female patient. There is high signal intensity thickening of the lower rectal submucosa (asterisk). Hemorrhoids can be quite florid and superficially resemble rectal tumor, which may lead to diagnostic error. The low-signal mucosa is, however, characteristically intact (curved arrows). If there is doubt, clinical and endoscopic review should confirm the diagnosis. (B) Sagittal T2WI in another female patient in whom there is prolapse of the posterior lower rectal wall secondary to submucosal hemorrhoids. Note the thickened submucosa (asterisk), and, within the prolapsed segment, the apposed double layer of intact, low-signal mucosa (arrowheads). Abbreviations: B, bladder; U, uterus.
Figure 9.33 Pelvic sepsis due to rectal anastomotic dehiscence. Transaxial T2WI demonstrating a large defect in the left side of the rectum at the level of the anastomosis, following anterior resection (curved arrow). Note the low-signal luminal gas extending into the perirectal tissue, which, more laterally, contains high-signal pus (asterisk). Abbreviations: B, bladder; O, left obturator internus muscle; P, left pyriformis muscle.
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FURTHER READING Atkin WS, Edwards R, Hines K-H, et al. Once-only flexible sigmoidoscopy screening in prevention of colorectal cancer: a multicentre randomised controlled trial. Lancet 2010; 375(9726):1624–1633. Beets-Tan RG, Beets GL, Vliegen RF. Accuracy of MR imaging in the prediction of tumour-free resection margins in rectal cancer surgery. Lancet 2001; 357:497–504. This paper demonstrates that the distance of tumor from the mesorectal fascia can be accurately predicted on pre-operative MR imaging, allowing identification of patients at risk for positive resection margins. Brown G, Richardson CJ, Newcombe RG, et al. Rectal carcinoma: thinsection MR imaging for staging in 28 patients. Radiology 1999; 211 (1):215–222. Seminal paper on the method and accuracy of high-resolution MR imaging in defining the stage and depth of extramural invasion of rectal cancer extent using surface phased array coils. Edge SB, Byrd DR, Compton CC, et al., eds. AJCC Cancer Staging Handbook. New York: Springer, 2010. The standard reference for TNM tumor staging. All new changes are clearly highlighted. There is also excellent background demographic and survival data. Heald RJ. Total mesorectal excision is optimal surgery for rectal cancer: a Scandinavian consensus. Br J Surg 1995; 82:1297–1299. This paper defines the best surgical practice for patients with operable rectal cancer. Kapiteijn E, Marijnen CAM, Nagstegaal ID, et al. Preoperative radiotherapy combined with total mesorectal excision for resectable
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rectal cancer. N Engl J Med 2001; 345(9):638–646. Large controlled trial proving that short-course pre-operative radiotherapy reduces the risk of local recurrence in patients with rectal cancer who have had a standardized TME. Kim HS, Lee JM, Hong SH, et al. Locally advanced rectal cancer: added value of diffusion-weighted MR imaging in the evaluation of tumour response to neoadjuvant chemo- and radiation therapy. Radiology 2009; 253(1):116–125. One of several small studies demonstrating that DWI improves diagnostic accuracy over conventional sequences in the evaluation of tumor response to neo-adjuvant chemotherapy for locally advanced rectal cancer. Kwok H, Bissett IP, Gill GL. Pre-operative staging of rectal cancer. Int J Colorectal Dis 2000; 15:9–20. A meta-analysis of almost 5000 patients in 83 studies comparing CT, MRI, and endoanal ultrasound for staging rectal cancer. Papillon J, Berard P. Endocavitary irradiation in the conservative management of adenocarcinoma of the low rectum. World J Surg 1992; 16:451–417. Groundbreaking work that is only recently being more widely explored in the United Kingdom. Skibber JM, Minsky BD, Hoff PM. Cancer of the colon. In: DeVita VT Jr., Hellman S, Rosenberg SA, eds. Cancer. Principles and Practice of Oncology. Vol 530, 7th ed. Walnut St., Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott, Williams and Wilkins, 2005. This is a definitive, comprehensive, and up-to-date text on all aspects of rectal cancer and it’s management.
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10 Anal cancer Rohit Kochhar and Paul A. Hulse
BACKGROUND INFORMATION Epidemiology
Patterns of Tumor Spread
Cancers of the anal canal are rare, accounting for approximately 1.5% of gastrointestinal tract malignancies. In the United States, there were an estimated 5260 new cases in 2010. In the United Kingdom, about 930 new cases are diagnosed each year and the incidence has increased threefold since the early 1970s, especially in women. Anal cancer is found mainly in adults, with the peak age incidence being in the early 60s. The disease affects women more often than men. Anal cancer was initially thought to be associated with chronic irritation from hemorrhoids, fissures, fistulas, and inflammatory bowel disease. It is now well established that the majority of anal cancers in both sexes are due to infection with human papillomavirus, particularly HPV16. There is an increased risk of anal cancer in men and women who practice anal receptive intercourse, who have had more than 10 sexual partners, or who have sexually transmitted diseases such as genital warts, gonorrhea, or Chlamydia trachomatis. Other etiological risk factors are immunosuppression, HIV infection, and smoking. Women with anal cancer have a higher incidence of vulval, vaginal, cervical, and lung cancers.
Carcinoma of the anus is an indolent disease, which usually becomes locally extensive before distant metastases occur. Anatomical localization is important as it reflects the pattern of spread. According to the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC), cancers are classified as anal tumors if their epicenter is less than or equal to 2 cm from the dentate line. They are rectal cancers if their epicenter is more than 2 cm proximal to the dentate line. Anal margin lesions are distal to the anal verge, where hair-bearing skin occurs. Anal canal cancers are of greater concern because they are more likely to invade the sphincters and spread deep into the pelvis via lymphatics and hemorrhoidal veins. The pattern of lymph node metastatic spread depends on the site of origin of the tumor within the anal canal. Above the dentate line, drainage is to the perirectal, internal iliac, and retroperitoneal nodes. Below the dentate line, drainage is to the inguinal nodes. The TNM staging classification for anal cancer remains unchanged in the seventh edition and is given in Table 10.1. At the time of presentation, approximately 50% of patients will have a T1 or T2 lesion and approximately 25% will have regional lymph node involvement.
Histopathology
Prognostic Indicators
The histology of tumors arising in the anus depends on their location with respect to the dentate line. The anal canal is divided by the dentate line into an upper part lined with transitional (urothelial type) or rectal glandular mucosa and a lower part lined by nonkeratinizing squamous epithelium. At the level of the dentate line there is a junctional area of squamous and nonsquamous mucosa. Cancers arising in the junctional zone at the level of and just above the dentate line are usually adenocarcinomas. Anal canal tumors below the dentate line are predominantly nonkeratinizing squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs). The anal margin is the pigmented skin surrounding the anus, extending laterally to a radius of approximately 5 cm from the anal orifice. Cancers arising from the anal margin are usually well-differentiated keratinizing SCCs. The previously employed subtype terms, basaloid, cloacogenic, and transitional, have now been abandoned because they are recognized as subgroups of nonkeratinizing SCC. Uncommonly, small cell carcinoma, undifferentiated carcinoma, and mucinous adenocarcinoma can arise within the anal canal to which the Tumor Node Metastasis (TNM) staging system applies. Melanoma, carcinoid tumors, and sarcomas rarely arise in the anal canal and are excluded from this staging system. Biological behavior, management strategies, and prognosis of the keratinizing and nonkeratinizing types of SCC are similar. Cancers arising in glandular mucosa of the upper anal canal behave like rectal cancers and are managed similarly.
Tumor size, location, and depth of penetration at presentation are the most important prognostic factors. Mobile lesions less than 2.0 cm in diameter are cured in approximately 80% of cases, whereas the cure rate for lesions greater than 5.0 cm in diameter is less than 50%. Skin ulceration and nodal disease are other poor prognostic factors. The likelihood of locoregional lymph node involvement is related to tumor size and location. Tumors at the anal verge are less likely to develop lymph node metastases than those at the anal canal, probably because of earlier clinical presentation. Women achieve better local control and longer survival.
Treatment Until the 1980s, the treatment of choice for cancer arising within the anal canal was an abdominoperineal resection (APR). In an attempt to reduce surgical failure rates, treatment with preoperative 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and mitomycin, combined with radiotherapy, was introduced in the United States. The first three patients treated in this way were found to have no residual tumor in the excised anus following APR. This unexpected finding led to a change in management of anal cancer. Primary treatment now employs chemoradiation with APR reserved for patients with persistent tumor on postradiation biopsy or those with locally recurrent disease. Local excision can be considered for small well-differentiated carcinomas of
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dimension is the maximum diameter for tumors protruding beyond the anal verge.
Table 10.1 Anal Carcinoma Staging Systems Description of tumor extent Primary tumor (T) TX T0 Tis T1 T2 T3 T4
Lymph node (N) NX N0 N1 N2 N3
Distant metastasis (M) M0 M1 Stage grouping Stage 0 Stage I Stage II Stage IIIA
Stage IIIB
Stage IV
Cannot assess primary tumor No evidence of primary tumor Carcinoma in situ Tumor <2 cm in greatest dimension Tumor > 2 cm but < 5 cm in greatest dimension Tumor > 5 cm in greatest dimension Tumor of any size invading adjacent structures, e.g., vagina, urethra, and bladder (involvement of sphincter muscle(s) alone is not classified as T4) Cannot assess regional lymph node No regional nodal metastasis Metastasis in perirectal lymph node(s) Metastasis in unilateral internal iliac and/or inguinal node(s) Metastasis in perirectal and inguinal nodes and/or bilateral internal iliac and/or inguinal nodes No distant metastasis Distant metastasis Tis T1 T2 T3 T1 T2 T3 T4 T4 Any T Any T Any T
N0 N0 N0 N0 N1 N1 N1 N0 N1 N2 N3 Any N
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M0 M0 M0 M0 M0 M0 M0 M0 M0 M0 M0 M1
the anal margin (T1 N0), that is, less than 2 cm in diameter, without evidence of nodal spread and with no sphincter involvement. Multicenter studies in Europe (UKCCR and EORTC) have confirmed the benefit of chemoradiotherapy (CRT) over radiation therapy alone in reducing locoregional recurrence and death from anal cancer and producing a higher colostomyfree rate and improved progression-free survival. However, no overall survival benefit was demonstrated with CRT. A five-year survival rate of 67% has been achieved using combined radiotherapy, 5-FU, and mitomycin.
MRI Staging Accuracy There are no published results for the staging accuracy of primary or recurrent anal cancer using MRI.
Technique For local staging, MRI can be performed using phased array or endoluminal coils with no proven diagnostic advantage of either technique. However, endoluminal coil imaging is limited by a narrow field of view near field artifact and may not be tolerated by patients with anal cancer. A pelvic phased array coil is however easy to place and shows both the local spread of the disease as well as lymph node involvement. A standard technique is employed with body coil transaxial T1WI to cover the abdomen and pelvis and highresolution thin section T2WI in the three orthogonal planes. Fatsuppressed imaging can help to improve the conspicuity of the primary tumor mass and STIR sequences are used in cases with a suspected fistula. We have found no significant added advantage of contrast-enhanced MRI over standard T2-weighted sequences in primary staging. The role of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) in the diagnosis and staging of primary anal tumors has not been defined.
Imaging Features Usually anal cancer is of intermediate to low signal intensity on T1WI and intermediate to high signal intensity on T2WI and fat-suppressed imaging. Mucinous adenocarcinoma displays characteristic high signal intensity on T2WI. Tumor usually spreads circumferentially around the anal wall and may form a lobulated intraluminal or extramural mass. Primary anal cancers are staged based on the size of the cancer. The sphincter complex is the most commonly infiltrated structure, followed by the rectum. Invasion of adjacent organs such as the vagina, urethra, or bladder is required to establish stage T4 disease.
Nodal Disease Metastatic spread occurs to the inguinal, iliac, perirectal, and retroperitoneal nodes. As with other pelvic malignancy, lymph nodes with a short-axis diameter greater than 1.0 cm in the pelvis and 1.5 cm in the inguinal regions are considered pathological. Lymph nodes are not normally identified in the perirectal fat and should be regarded as pathological (hyperplastic or metastatic) when seen. Other radiological features of malignant nodes include signal intensity similar to the primary mass, extracapulsar infiltration, and central necrosis particularly when the primary mass is an SCC.
MRI OF ANAL CANCER Current Indications
Metastatic Disease
MRI has become the imaging modality of choice for locoregional staging and assessment of tumor regression following CRT. MRI displays high-resolution multiplanar images of the location, size, and circumferential and craniocaudal extent of the primary tumor and provides information regarding the involvement of adjacent structures. MRI is especially useful in staging large tumors particularly when the craniocaudal
Posttreatment—Chemoradiotherapy
In advanced disease, distant metastatic spread is primarily to the liver.
Posttreatment MRI is generally performed six to eight weeks after CRT. There is usually a reduction in size of the primary tumor with residual mixed, predominantly low signal intensity
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seen at the site of the original tumor. However, response to treatment can continue to occur for up to three to six months with resultant progressive fibrotic changes, and therefore a further follow-up MRI is advisable. In the United Kingdom Co-ordinating Committee on Cancer Research (UKCCCR) study, 70% of patients who had not achieved a complete response at the 6-week assessment demonstrated further tumor regression with longer follow-up. Changes in normal tissues are mainly attributable to radiotherapy. An acute reaction occurs up to three months following treatment and is characterized by mucosal edema and high signal on T2WI of the anal musculature. It is possible to mistake this appearance for disease, and correlation with pretreatment imaging is crucial to avoid this pitfall. Chronic changes occur up to five years following treatment and are predominantly fibrotic in nature, with low signal on T2WI and consequent morphological distortion of the pelvic viscera and soft tissues. Affected bone marrow shows fatty change seen as high signal on T1WI.
involvement is also different in distribution, with the inguinal nodes being less commonly involved and perirectal, presacral, and internal iliac nodes more commonly involved. Distant metastases are present in a large number of patients undergoing MRI for recurrence following surgery.
Pitfalls of MRI l
Posttreatment—Surgery Following APR, there are characteristic MRI appearances: l
l
l
A band of presacral fibrosis occurs, seen as intermediate signal on T1WI and low signal on T2WI. The levator ani muscles are sutured together with a consequent irregular contour to the central pelvic floor. The pelvic viscera prolapse posteriorly into the void left by the excised anorectum.
l
When radical pelvic surgery includes pelvic floor resection for advanced or recurrent tumors, reconstruction is performed using muscle grafts.
Residual/Recurrent Disease Following treatment, persistence of intermediate signal intensity on T2WI at the site of the original tumor, particularly if similar to the primary tumor, is suspicious of local residual disease and warrants biopsy assessment. Posttreatment high signal on T2WI usually signifies mucosal edema and low signal on T2WI represents fibrosis. Recurrent disease can occur at the site of the primary tumor mass, in the locoregional lymph nodes or outside of the radiation field, and can occur in up to 35% of anal cancer patients despite combined modality treatment. Recurrent anal cancer is often more extensive with involvement of adjacent organs and the pelvic skeleton. In recurrent as opposed to primary anal cancers, lymph node
l
Identifying the location and extent of the primary tumor can be problematic in anal cancer especially when the tumor is small. l Reference to the clinical findings and findings at examination under anesthetic can guide the radiologist to the site of the primary tumor. l Fat-suppressed imaging can increase tumor conspicuity. l Description of the relationship of the tumor to the anorectal junction, located at the indentation of the puborectalis muscle, helps differentiate between tumors of rectal and anal origin. l Measurement of tumor volume is difficult with infiltrative anal cancers that have circumferential spread. Measurement of the radial diameter of the anal canal wall at the site of tumor is useful for comparison with subsequent examinations. Prediction of metastatic disease in inguinal lymph nodes is particularly difficult. Inguinal nodes can normally measure up to 1.5 cm in short-axis diameter. However, the use of this measurement probably reduces sensitivity for the identification of metastatic disease. Features suggestive of metastatic disease in nonenlarged and enlarged nodes are as follows: l Round shape l Asymmetrical clustering in the groin or on the pelvic sidewall l Central nodal necrosis, which is a strong indicator of metastatic disease in squamous cell tumors Differentiation between residual/recurrent tumor and posttreatment effect can be difficult. l Reference to pretreatment MRI to establish the exact site of original tumor is recommended. l Posttreatment mucosal edema generally has a higher signal than the intermediate signal of residual/recurrent tumor. l Hemorrhoids can be difficult to recognize, as they are of variable signal on T2WI, depending on state of scarring/ fibrosis so that clinical examination may be required for confirmation when their presence is suspected.
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Figure 10.1 Normal anatomy of the anus. (A) Coronal, (B) sagittal, and (C) transaxial T2WI. The anorectal junction is depicted by a bold line in (A, B). In A, this is seen at the level of the transition of the puborectalis sling into the external sphincter (arrows). In B, this is at the level of a horizontal line drawn between the tip of the coccyx and the posterior margin of the pubis. The anal verge is at the mucocutaneous junction and marks the distal limit of the anal canal (hashed line in A and B). The anal margin (AM) in A and B extends for 5 cm circumferentially distal to the anal verge. The dentate line, although not visible on MRI, is seen macroscopically approximately 2.5 to 3 cm proximal to the anal verge (dashed and dotted line in A). The anal canal (AC) is shown in A, B, and C. The sphincter anatomy is depicted in C: internal sphincter (IS) longitudinal muscle layer in intersphincteric space (LM), external sphincter (ES), anococcygeal body (AB), perineal body (PB), and ischioanal fossa (IAF).
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Figure 10.2 T1 anal cancer. (A) Transaxial T2WI and (B) transaxial STIR image showing lobulated intermediate signal intensity tumor mass less than 2 cm in greatest dimension extending through anal wall (arrows). Abbreviation: V, vagina. Figure 10.3 T2 anal cancer. (A) Sagittal, (B) transaxial, and (C) coronal T2WI showing intermediate signal intensity mass (T) extending from the anal verge over a distance of 3 cm (arrowheads in A and C). The tumor infiltrates the internal sphincter from the 12 to 3 o’clock positions in the transaxial plane (arrows in B).
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Figure 10.3 (Continued )
Figure 10.4 T2 anal cancer. (A) Transaxial T2WI and (B) coronal T2WI showing intermediate signal intensity, non lobulated tumor (arrows) between 2 and 5 cm maximum diameter which extends to the anal verge. There is an incidental right adnexal cyst (asterisk).
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Figure 10.5 T2 anal cancer. (A) Transaxial T2W and (B) coronal T2W images demonstrate an intermediate signal intensity mass in the left anal canal from 12 to 6 o’clock positions (arrow in A and B) extending craniocaudally over approximately 4 cm to below the anorectal junction (arrowhead in B). Post-contrast T1W fat-suppressed transaxial (C) and coronal (D) images demonstrate moderate to intense enhancement of the mass differentiating it from the adjacent normal mucosa (arrows in C and D). Note is also made of incidental left ovarian teratodermoid (asterisk in B).
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Figure 10.6 T3 anal cancer. (A) Sagittal, (B) transaxial, and (C) coronal T2WI showing intermediate signal intensity tumor (T) extending from the anal verge over a distance of more than 5 cm (arrowheads in A and C). The tumor infiltrates the left puborectalis (arrow in B and C). Note a presacral lymph node (N) in A which represents a possible metastasis.
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Figure 10.7 T3 anal cancer. (A) Sagittal, (B) coronal, and (C) transaxial T2WI demonstrate an intermediate signal intensity anal mass extending inferiorly from the anal margin into the upper anal canal measuring >5 cm (arrows in A and B). The tumor infiltrates the external sphincter between 3 o’clock and 6 o’clock positions (arrowheads in C) and extends through it into the subcutaneous fat and ulcerates on to the skin surface (arrows in B and C). Note the small perirectal lymph nodes in B that represent possible metastatic nodes and a trace of ascites likely incidental (asterisk in A).
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Figure 10.8 T3 anal cancer. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI showing large lobulated high signal intensity mass (arrows) characteristic of a mucinous adenocarcinoma. Tumor has extended through the anal sphincter into the fat of the ischioanal fossa and buttock to abut onto the natal cleft; it also extends cranially into the lower rectum (asterisk). Abbreviations: IAF, ischioanal fossa; NC, natal cleft. Figure 10.9 T3 squamous cell anal cancer with rectal extension. (A) Sagittal, (B) coronal, and (C) transaxial T2WI demonstrate a heterogeneous anal canal mass extending beyond the anorectal junction into the lower rectum (arrows). The anorectal junction is best seen in B and is denoted by the dashed line labeled ARJ. The epicenter of the mass is less than 2 cm from the dentate line denoted by the dashed line labeled DL in B, making it a primary anal tumor. There is an extension beyond the left external sphincter to infiltrate the left levator sling at 5 o’clock (arrowhead in C). Note presacral lymph nodes (open arrowheads in A) which represent probable metastatic nodes with a similar signal intensity to the primary tumor. (Continued)
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Figure 10.9 (Continued )
Figure 10.10 T4 anal cancer with vaginal invasion. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI showing a lobulated intermediate signal intensity tumor (T) which has extended laterally through the sphincter complex into the ischioanal fossa (arrow in B) and anteriorly into the left side of the vagina (arrowheads in A and B).
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Figure 10.11 NI anal cancer. Transaxial T2WI showing lymph node metastases in the perirectal fat (arrows) and local spread of primary tumor to rectum (asterisk). Lymph nodes are not normally identified in the perirectal fat on MRI and should be regarded as pathological. Differentiation between malignant and hyperplastic nodes on the basis of size is not reliable in this location. Nodes with central necrosis or a similar signal characteristic to the primary tumor, as in this case, favor malignant disease.
Figure 10.12 NI anal cancer. Transaxial T2WI from mucinous anal cancer (T) shown in Figure 10.8. The perirectal lymph node (arrow) shows central high signal indicating a high probability of metastatic disease. Central lymph node high signal on T2WI occurs with metastatic mucin-secreting adenocarcinoma and central nodal necrosis in squamous cell carcinoma. A benign right inguinal node, with fat in the hilum (arrowheads), also returns high signal on T2WI. The eccentrically located fat usually indicates its benign significance, but uncertainty can be resolved with fat-suppressed (STIR) sequences.
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Figure 10.13 N2 anal cancer. Transaxial T2WI showing enlarged left inguinal lymph node with heterogeneous signal intensity (arrow) and the primary anal tumor (T).
Figure 10.15 N3 anal cancer. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T2WI showing bilateral inguinal lymph node metastases (arrows). Note intermediate signal intensity of the primary tumor (T). On the right side the node has a ragged margin (arrowheads) indicating extranodal tumor extension.
Figure 10.14 N3 anal cancer. Coronal T2WI showing bilateral surgical obturator (internal iliac) lymph node metastases (arrows). Note infiltrating anorectal tumor (T).
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Figure 10.16 Retroperitoneal, porta hepatis, and liver metastases in anal cancer. Transaxial T1WI showing enlarged interaortocaval lymph node (arrow), porta hepatis lymph node mass (arrowheads), and liver metastasis (asterisk). Note the intrahepatic bile duct dilatation secondary to the obstructing porta hepatis mass.
Figure 10.17 T3 anal cancer with fistula. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T2WI showing circumferential spread of an intermediate/high signal intensity tumor mass (arrows). There is transmural spread of tumor with a fluid and air containing fistula (open arrowheads) extending through the pubococcygeal portion of the levator ani muscle into the ischioanal fossa (IAF).
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Figure 10.18 T2 anal cancer with complete response to treatment. Transaxial T2WI performed (A) prior to treatment and (B) 8 weeks and (C) 20 weeks following completion of chemoradiotherapy. In A, there is a lobulated high-signal intensity tumor (T) centered on the anal verge with early infiltration of the right ischioanal fossa (arrows). In B, there has been response to treatment with virtual complete resolution of the tumor with a residual low signal intensity lesion (arrowheads) and some adjacent higher signal intensity cutaneous edema (crossed arrow). In C, there has been further organization with resolution of the mucosal edema and a residual band of low signal intensity fibrosis (arrowheads).
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Figure 10.19 T2 anal cancer with complete response to treatment and persistent mucosal edema (pseudotumor). (A) Transaxial T2WI, (B) transaxial fat-suppressed T1WI, and (C) coronal T2WI obtained prior to treatment demonstrate a lobulated intermediate signal intensity tumor (T) in the left anal canal. The boundary of the mass (arrows) is more conspicuous on the fat-suppressed image in B. (D) Transaxial T2WI, (E) fat-suppressed T1WI, and (F) coronal T2WI obtained 8 weeks following completion of chemoradiotherapy. There is a complete response with parallel bands of low signal intensity (arrows) representing fibrosis which enclose the reconstituted internal sphincter (arrowheads). There is mucosal edema (asterisk) in the anal canal attributable to the treatment. (G) Transaxial and (H) coronal T2WI obtained 20 weeks following completion of treatment. The treated tumor has not recurred (arrows). On the right side of the anal canal, mucosal edema persists and gives a polypoid (pseudotumor) appearance (asterisk) which should not be mistaken for recurrent disease. (Continued)
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Figure 10.19 (Continued )
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Figure 10.20 Chronic radiation reaction. Transaxial T2WI showing changes in pelvic viscera four years following chemoradiotherapy for a T3 anal cancer. There is a mixed signal mass (M) fixed to the left piriformis muscle (P) stable in appearance over a one-year period indicating the lack of residual proliferating tumor. There is a band of presacral edema (arrows). The rectum and an adjacent loop of dependent small bowel show diffuse low signal, mural thickening, and minor serosal spiculation due to fibrosis (open arrowheads). Chronic radiation reactions can develop up to five years following treatment and persist indefinitely.
Figure 10.21 Residual anal cancer on diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI). (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T2WI demonstrate the primary anal cancer seen as an area of intermediate signal intensity extending from the anal margin to just beyond the anal verge (arrows). (C) Transaxial and (D) coronal T2WI four months after completion of chemoradiotherapy demonstrate an increase in size of the mass in the left anal canal which now has heterogeneous signal intensity and extends to the lateral margin of the external sphincter (arrowhead). The inferior anal margin component has however responded. (E) High b-value (b = 1000) DWI and (F) corresponding ADC images demonstrate restricted diffusion in the periphery of the mass (curved arrow) with central necrosis. Abbreviation: ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient. (Continued)
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Figure 10.21 (Continued )
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Figure 10.22 Locally extensive recurrent anal cancer following chemoradiotherapy and abdominoperineal resection. (A) Transaxial T1WI showing recurrent tumor (arrows) with substantial destruction of the left ischiopubic ramus and pubic bone. T1WIs are useful for indicating the extent of bone disease. (B) Transaxial, (C) coronal, and (D) sagittal T2W images showing extent of soft tissue infiltration in the pelvis by recurrent disease. Tumor has invaded the prostate and bladder with fistulation to a complex deep pelvic/perineal cavity (C). There is circumferential thickening of the bladder wall (crossed arrows in D). A separate gas-containing cavity is present in the involved pelvic floor and obturator muscles (arrowheads). A suprapubic catheter is in situ in the bladder (SP). Note the iliac lymph nodes (asterisk) in C which are equivocal for metastatic disease or hyperplasia secondary to pelvic sepsis. Multiplanar imaging is important in evaluating such complex cases and fistulas.
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Figure 10.23 Recurrent anal cancer following chemoradiotherapy. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T2WI showing a recurrent intermediate signal intensity tumor mass in the left anal canal and rectum (arrows). The rest of the anal wall is thickened and is of low signal intensity, representing radiation-induced fibrosis (open arrowheads). Note probable inguinal lymph node metastasis (asterisk) and definite perirectal lymph node metastasis (solid arrowheads).
Figure 10.24 Recurrent anal cancer following chemoradiotherapy. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T2WI showing recurrent tumor involving rectum (arrows), perirectal, right obturator and right internal iliac (asterisk), and bilateral common iliac lymph nodes (solid arrowheads). Note the dependent small bowel loop with mural thickening and mild serosal spiculation (open arrowheads) due to radiation change.
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Figure 10.25 Recurrence following total pelvic clearance. (A, C, D) Transaxial and (B, E) sagittal T2WI. A and B demonstrate the usual appearances following abdominoperineal resection of the rectum. There is posterior prolapse of the uterus (asterisk) into the void left by the excised rectum. There is descent of the bladder below the pubococcygeal line (dashed line in B) because of weakness of the pelvic floor. A recurrent tumor nodule is evident in the lower vagina (arrow in C). This necessitated a total pelvic clearance with pelvic floor flap reconstruction. Two years following this surgery, asymptomatic recurrent disease was identified on surveillance imaging. This is evident as a heterogeneous signal intensity mass (T) in D and E centered on and penetrating the reconstructed pelvic floor (arrowheads in D) to extend into the left ischiorectal fossa and infiltrating the fascia over the gluteus (crossed arrow in D). (Continued)
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Figure 10.25 (Continued )
FURTHER READING Das P, Bhatia S, Eng C, et al. Predictors and patterns of recurrence after definitive chemoradiation for anal cancer. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 2007; 68:794–800. Study of 167 patients with nonmetastatic squamous cell anal carcinoma demonstrates that the majority of locoregional failures involve the anus and rectum, whereas inguinal recurrences occur rarely. Glynne-Jones R, Northover J, Oliveira J. Anal cancer: ESMO clinical recommendations for diagnosis, treatment and follow-up. Ann Oncol 2009; 20(suppl 4):57–60. Internationally accepted recommendations for anal cancer. Indinnimco M, Cicchini C, Stazi A, et al. Magnetic resonance imaging using endoanal coil in anal canal tumours after radiochemotherapy or local excision. Int Surg 2000; 85:143–146. Study illustrating difficulty in differentiating tumor from benign change following treatment. Koh DM, Dzik-Jurasz A, O’Neill B, et al. Pelvic phased-array MR imaging of anal carcinoma before and after chemoradiation. Br J
Radiol 2008; 81:91–98. Review of MR appearances of anal carcinoma before and after chemoradiation. Raghunathan G, Mortele KJ. Magnetic resonance imaging of anorectal neoplasms. Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol 2009; 7:379–388. Primer for MR technique and appearances of anal cancer. Roach SC, Hulse PA, Moulding FJ, et al. Magnetic resonance imaging of anal cancer. Clin Radiol 2005; 60:1111–1119. Useful review in series of 27 patients, mainly with recurrent disease. Ryan DP, Compton CC, Mayer RJ. Carcinoma of the anal canal. N Engl J Med 2000; 342:792–800. Informative review. Stoker J, Rocio E, Wiersma TG, et al. Imaging of anorectal disease. Br J Surg 2000; 87:10–27. Useful review of anorectal imaging, but concentrating on benign disease of the anal canal and malignant disease of the rectum. Uronis HE, Bendell JC. Anal cancer: an overview. Oncologist 2007; 12:524–534. Good general review of clinical features and imaging of anal cancer.
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11 Bladder cancer Suzanne Bonington
BACKGROUND INFORMATION Epidemiology Bladder cancer is the ninth most common malignancy worldwide and accounts for 3% of all new malignancies in the United Kingdom. The peak incidence is in the sixth and seventh decade, with the rate in elderly men being three times higher than that in elderly women. The U.K. age standardized incidence rate per 100,000 population is 18.9 for males and 5.3 for females. This incidence rate for men is low compared to the average for the European Union, which is 28/100,000 population. Smoking is the principal risk factor causing two-thirds of bladder cancers in males and one-third of bladder cancer in females. The risk is proportional to the duration of time smoking and the number of cigarettes smoked and decreases with time from cessation of smoking. There is also an increased risk of bladder cancer after exposure to various aromatic amines, causing an occupational hazard in the chemical, rubber, and paint industries. These industrial risk factors are well controlled in Europe but are seen as causes of bladder cancer in developing countries. Squamous cell carcinoma is associated with chronic urinary tract infections and prolonged schistosomiasis infection. This accounts for the high incidence rates in some areas of Africa. There is thought to be a hormonal association, with an increased incidence of bladder cancer in women who have undergone bilateral oophorectomy or an early menopause. There is also evidence of a racial difference in bladder cancer with a higher incidence in whites compared to nonwhites.
Histopathology In the United Kingdom, bladder tumors are predominantly epithelial in origin. Ninety percent are of transitional cell type with approximately 50% arising from the lateral bladder walls and 20% from the base/trigone. Squamous cell carcinoma, or mixed transitional cell and squamous cell carcinoma, accounts for 5% to 10% of malignancies. Adenocarcinoma, which accounts for 2% to 3% of malignancies, usually arises from the bladder urothelium but may also develop in the urachal remnant. Other cell types such as small cell are extremely rare, accounting for less than 1% of cases. At presentation about one-third of bladder tumors are multifocal in origin. Two to four percent of patients will also have lesions in the urothelium of the kidneys and ureter and, therefore, upper tract screening investigations are essential in patients presenting with bladder cancer. Approximately twothirds of bladder tumors are superficial and are usually papillary. These tumors have a good prognosis. One-third show infiltration into or beyond the bladder wall and have a worse prognosis.
Patterns of Tumor Spread Direct spread of tumor occurs into the perivesical fat, pelvic organs and to the pelvic sidewalls. Lymph node metastases are rare in superficial tumors but occur in 30% of patients when the deep muscle layer of the bladder is involved and in 60% of cases where there is extravesical tumor spread. The first lymph nodes involved are the anterior and lateral paravesical nodes and the presacral nodes. Subsequent nodal spread is to the internal iliac, obturator, and external iliac nodes and finally to the common iliac and para-aortic nodes. Para-aortic nodes are considered as distant metastases (M1) in the TNM staging system. Occasionally, metastatic lymph nodes may be identified above the diaphragm. Distant metastases to the liver, bones, lungs, adrenal glands, and brain are late features of bladder cancer. A summary of the TNM system is seen in Table 11.1, and illustrated in Diagram 1.
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Tumor stage: The depth of bladder wall invasion is the most important prognostic variable. Five-year survival decreases from approximately 80% to 90% for T1 disease to 50% for muscle invasive disease and to 5% to 10% for T4 disease. A major adverse feature is the presence of lymph node metastases. Tumor grade: Tumors are histologically graded as high or low grade. High-grade tumors are more likely to be infiltrative and to metastasize, irrespective of tumor stage at presentation. Multiple lesions: Multifocal tumor adversely affects survival. Multiple papillary recurrences in a short timescale worsens prognosis, as with each recurrence there is a 10% to 20% likelihood that the tumor will be of a higher grade. Lymph node metastases: Poor prognosis is associated with the number of positive lymph nodes and the ratio of positive lymph nodes to the number of nodes sampled. Poor prognosis is also associated with extracapsular tumor extension. Other factors: The following have been identified as adverse features: tumor size, vascular and lymphatic invasion, expression of epidermal growth factor receptors, mutation of P53, upregulation of Rb and other oncogene expression, hydronephrosis, and anemia.
Treatment Patients with superficial bladder tumors are treated with local endoscopic resection, often with a single postoperative dose of chemotherapy. Patients with frequent recurrences or high-
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Table 11.1 TNM Classification of Carcinoma of the Bladder, AJCC 2010 TNM classification
Description of tumor extent
TX T0 Ta Tis T1 T2 pT2a
Cannot assess primary tumor No evidence of primary tumor Noninvasive papillary carcinoma Flat tumor, carcinoma in situ Invasion of subepithelial connective tissues Invasion of muscularis propria Invasion of superficial muscularis propria (inner half) Invasion of deep muscularis propria (outer half) Invasion of perivesical tissue Microscopically Macroscopically (extravesical mass) Invasion of any of the following: prostatic stroma, seminal vesicles, uterus, vagina, pelvic wall, and abdominal wall Invasion of prostatic stroma, uterus, vagina Invasion of pelvic wall and abdominal wall Cannot assess lymph nodes No lymph node metastasis Single regional lymph node metastasis in the true pelvis (hypogastric, obturator, external or internal iliac, perivesical or presacral lymph node) Multiple regional lymph node metastasis in the true pelvis (hypogastric, obturator, external or internal iliac, perivesical or presacral lymph node) Metastasis to the common iliac nodes No distant metastasis Distant metastasis
pT2b T3 pT3a pT3b T4
T4a T4b NX N0 N1
N2
N3 M0 M1
Diagram 1 T Staging of bladder cancer
grade disease may require other intravesical treatment or a radical cystectomy, which involves removal of the bladder and adjacent organs. In a male this includes the prostate and seminal vesicles and in a female the uterus, cervix, ovaries, and anterior vagina. A urinary diversion or neobladder is then formed. Muscle invasive disease with minimal perivesical spread is most commonly treated by radical cystectomy and lymph node dissection or with radiotherapy. Both of these treatments are frequently preceded by chemotherapy (neoadjuvant therapy). Radiotherapy treatment with curative intent may be given concurrently with chemotherapies such as gemcitabine and cisplatin. These have been shown to be reasonably tolerated and have good local and distant disease control, with the advantage of bladder preservation. Advanced disease is palliated with either mitomycin-based chemotherapy or radiotherapy.
MRI OF BLADDER CANCER Technique The bladder should be moderately distended to separate the walls, but not too much so as to cause degradation of the images by motion artifact due to patient restlessness. This can usually be achieved by asking the patient to micturate two hours before the examination. Respiratory motion is limited by putting a band across the patient’s abdomen or more commonly by the use of a phased-array pelvic coil. Hyoscinen-butyl bromide (Buscopan1) or glucagon injection reduces artifact from bowel motion. A standard technique using T1W and high-resolution turbo/fast spin echo T2W sequences is used for staging. Imaging in multiple orthogonal planes is required. Sagittal and coronal planes are particularly useful for assessing tumors at the dome and trigone of the bladder. Fat-saturated/STIR sequences with intravenous contrast are sometimes used and studies suggest a 9% to 14% improvement in staging accuracy with contrast-enhanced imaging. Enhancement should appear earlier and be greater in the tumor compared to the normal bladder wall. Dynamic scanning of the whole bladder using a T1-weighted gradient echo sequence following administration of contrast allows the production of enhancement curves showing signal variation with time within selected regions of interest. Enhancement curves obtained from tumors demonstrate rapid enhancement which plateaus within a short period of time while nonmalignant tissues, such as fibrosis and postbiopsy inflammation, demonstrate more gradual enhancement which takes longer to peak. The normal bladder wall demonstrates a very low level of enhancement. Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) may be useful to identify bladder tumors. Early studies suggest that, when combined with T2W and contrast-enhanced examinations, this sequence may help to differentiate stage T1 from stage T2 tumors. If intravenous contrast has been given during the examination, a breath-hold T1-weighted MR angiographic sequence can produce a contrast urogram, which may be helpful to assess the pelvicalyceal systems and ureters for synchronous primaries.
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Current Indications Cystoscopic examination and biopsy remain the basis for evaluation of superficial tumors. MR is valuable in patients with invasive disease as clinical evaluation with bimanual palpation to assess adherence to local structures has an accuracy of only 50% to 75%.
Staging Accuracy The accuracy of MR in staging of bladder cancer varies between 73% and 96%. This is 10% to 30% higher than that achieved with CT. The improvement in accuracy is due to better visualization of the dome and trigone of the bladder and assessing adjacent organ invasion. MR, while still better than CT, is worse at staging low-stage tumors compared to high-stage disease due to the difficulty in differentiating between superficial and deep muscle invasion and early extravesical spread. MRI has been shown to be superior to clinical staging for patients treated with radiotherapy in that MR stage correlated better with risk of treatment failure and cancer-specific survival. Studies have assessed the use of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET-CT in the staging of muscle invasive bladder cancer. They have indicated that there is a potential role for PET-CT to look for metastatic disease in patients prior to radical cystectomy. Assessment of the bladder and local lymph nodes is possible, with promising results but requires strategies such as diuresis and catheterization to reduce the confounding effects of FDG activity in the bladder.
Posttreatment and Recurrence After cystectomy, the bladder bed may demonstrate low-signal intensity fibrosis and bowel often prolapses into it or becomes adherent to the fibrotic tissue. The ileal loop diversion may be visualized, usually in the right iliac fossa. Local tumor recurrence following cystectomy is usually evident as a solid mass of intermediate to high signal in the bladder bed. Radiation therapy usually results in low-signal fibrotic change, but it can also cause generalized or focal bladder wall thickening of intermediate to high signal intensity on T2W images for up to 4 years after treatment, making differentiation from tumor difficult. Dynamic contrast-enhanced scans may be useful in differentiating recurrent tumor from posttreatment effects.
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Imaging Features Primary Tumor On T1W sequences, the perivesical fat appears high signal, the normal bladder wall intermediate signal, and urine in the bladder low signal. In general, the individual muscle layers of the bladder wall are not discriminated. This sequence is useful for assessing extravesical spread of tumor into the perivesical fat, lymph node enlargement, and bone metastases. T2W-weighted sequences are best at delineating intraorgan anatomy and are therefore used to assess bladder wall invasion and evaluate tumor extension into the prostate, uterus, or vagina. On T2W images, the bladder muscle layer is of low signal intensity and tumor is of intermediate signal intensity, slightly higher than that of the bladder wall. An intact low-signal muscle layer at the base of the tumor indicates a noninvasive tumor. Fullthickness wall invasion is difficult to see on MR but is implied by retraction of the outer bladder wall. A mass with an irregular shaggy outer border, perivesical nodules, or intermediate signal stranding of the fat is indicative of extravesical spread. Lymph Node Metastases/Spread Features suggestive of lymph node metastases include size, round shape, irregular margins, similar signal to the primary tumor, and presence of asymmetrical clusters of nodes. Lymph nodes are considered enlarged if they measure more than 8 mm in short axis if round, and 10 mm if oval shaped. In the seventh AJCC cancer staging manual (2010), the size of the nodes no longer alters the TNM stage. N2 disease involves multiple nodes, N3 the common iliac nodes, and disease is M1 if it involves retroperitoneal nodes above the level of the aortic bifurcation.
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Differentiation between T1, T2, and T3a tumors—It can be difficult to differentiate between the superficial and deep muscle layers of the bladder wall and to identify small volume extravesical extension on MR. In general, this is not a significant clinical problem as the differentiation between low-stage tumors does not affect management and is usually determined histologically. If required contrast and DWI may help in this differentiation and assist in evaluating prognosis. Bladder diverticula—Diverticula do not have a muscle layer and therefore direct spread of tumor from the superficial epithelium into the perivesical fat occurs early (T3). Over or under distension of the bladder—If the bladder is too full, images may be degraded by motion artifact. If the bladder is poorly distended the tumor and bladder wall may not be well visualized. Motion artifact can also degrade images at the dome of the bladder. Care in patient preparation and administration of smooth muscle relaxants may prevent these problems. Recent cystoscopic biopsy causing postoperative edema and inflammatory reaction can result in over staging. It is therefore imperative to have accurate information regarding the dates and depths of biopsies. In some circumstances, it may be necessary to rescan the patient at a later date or use dynamic contrast-enhanced imaging. Chemical shift artifact can potentially impair staging by affecting the perception of tumor depth of invasion. This is overcome by using orthogonal planes and altering the phase-encoding direction so that it is perpendicular to the tumor/bladder wall interface. Differentiation between late fibrosis, granulation tissue, and residual/recurrent tumor may be difficult. Tumor is more likely if there is a new or enlarging mass or new disease outside the treated area. Dynamic contrastenhanced sequences may be helpful when tumor should enhance earlier and more avidly than fibrosis. Differentiation between benign and malignant lymph nodes—Small nodes may contain malignant cells and enlarged nodes may be reactive to infection or inflammation. Lymph nodes of a similar signal intensity to the primary lesion are more likely to be malignant.
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Figure 11.1 Normal bladder—moderate distension. Transaxial T2WI through the bladder. The normal bladder muscle layer demonstrates low signal intensity (arrow), the mucosa intermediate signal (crossed arrow) with high signal urine within the bladder (B) and intermediate signal perivesical fat (F). (A) The normal high signal returned from the seminal vesicles (S) is seen. (B) A more cranial section, the distal ureters (U) are seen as they enter the bladder (B). The vas deferens (VD) are also clearly visualized.
Figure 11.2 Normal bladder—extreme distension. (A) Midline sagittal, (B) transaxial, and (C) coronal T2WI through the bladder, following injection of 20-mg hyoscine-n-butyl bromide. The normal bladder muscle is seen as a thin band of low signal intensity (arrows), the mucosa is a fine line of intermediate signal on the inner aspect of the muscle layer (crossed arrows) with high signal urine within the bladder. Urethral meatus (open arrow) bladder trigone (arrowheads).
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Figure 11.2 (Continued )
Figure 11.3 Bladder wall trabeculation. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI through the bladder. These images demonstrate circumferential low-signal thickening of the bladder wall (arrows) in keeping with detrusor muscle hypertrophy due to chronic bladder outlet obstruction.
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Figure 11.4 Polypoid T1 tumor. Coronal T2WI through the bladder. A large polypoid lesion (P) is seen arising from the left bladder wall. Note is made of the low-signal central vascular pedicle (arrow). The relatively low-signal muscle wall is intact, indicating that this is a nonmuscle invasive tumor (T1).
Figure 11.5 T2a bladder cancer. (A) Sagittal T2WI and (B) fat-saturated contrast-enhanced T1WI demonstrating an enhancing tumor invading the superficial bladder muscle (arrows). The intact outer bladder wall is demonstrated (open arrow). The patient has benign prostatic hypertrophy (asterisk). Source: Courtesy of Dr M Haider, Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto.
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Figure 11.6 T3b bladder cancer. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) T2WI of a male patient with transitional cell carcinoma (T) of the bladder demonstrating transmural extension with stranding within the perivesical fat (arrows). There are also multiple serpiginous structures (open arrows) in the perivesical fat immediately adjacent to the tumor, which are of intermediate signal on T1W and high signal on T2W. These are perivesical vessels and could be confused with extravesical tumor if only the T1W sequence was assessed. The filling defect within the bladder represents benign prostatic hypertrophy (arrowheads).
Figure 11.7 T3b bladder cancer. Transaxial T2WI demonstrating extension of tumor (T) into the perivesical fat. Note the normal bladder wall demonstrates low signal intensity (open arrows) while the tumor demonstrates intermediate signal intensity, outlined by high-signal urine and intermediate to high-signal intensity perivesical fat. The tumor is involving the right ureteric orifice and causing a right-sided hydroureter (U). Uterus (open arrowhead), right external iliac node (N), rectum (R).
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Figure 11.8 T4a bladder cancer. Sagittal T2WI. There is a large bladder tumor arising from the bladder base and extending along the posterosuperior wall. The tumor is extending through the posterior bladder wall and perivesical fat and is invading the vagina (arrows) and lower cervix. Uterus (), rectum (R), symphysis pubis (S).
Figure 11.9 T4a bladder cancer. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI, demonstrating a small tumor (arrow ) arising from the posterior bladder wall extending into the vaginal vault. The patient had a previous hysterectomy for benign disease. Note is made of tethering of the peritoneum just superior to the mass (arrowhead ).
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Figure 11.10 T4a bladder cancer. Sagittal T2WI. A lobulated bladder base tumor (T) is invading the prostatic stroma. There is small volume anterior extravesical extension into the anterior perivesical fat (arrow), very close to the pubic symphysis. The tumor is stage 4a due to the prostatic involvement. Had the tumor involved the symphysis, this would have increased the stage to 4b.
Figure 11.11 T4b bladder cancer. Transaxial T2WI through the bladder. There is a large bladder tumor (T) extending to the rectus sheath anteriorly (arrows). Note the altered signal intensity of the rectus muscle which is different from the tumor and probably due to edema. There is also tumor arising in the posterior bladder (asterisks) which is not invading muscle (T2 or less) but is obstructing the left ureter (U).
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Figure 11.12 T4b bladder cancer. (A, B) Coronal T2WI. In A, a large bladder tumor (T) is seen extending into the perivesical fat and to the right posterior pelvic sidewall where it is starting to encase the right external iliac vessels (arrow). In B, tumor is seen to encase the roots of the sciatic nerve (open arrow).
Figure 11.13 T3bN1 bladder cancer. Transaxial T2WI through the bladder. There is a large intermediate signal intensity tumor (T) involving the right anterolateral bladder wall and extending into the perivesical fat. A left perivesical node is seen (arrowhead). This is of similar signal intensity to the main bladder tumor. A left obturator node (N) is seen with a similar signal intensity to the tumor proper making it more likely to be a metastatic node.
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Figure 11.14 T3b N2 bladder cancer. (A, B) Transaxial T2WI and (C) coronal T2WI. A bladder tumor (T) is extending into the perivesical fat (arrows) and obstructing the right ureter (arrowheads). There is a right obturator lymph node metastasis (N).
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Figure 11.15 N2 bladder cancer. Transaxial T2WI showing bilateral metastatic obturator nodes (N). The right obturator node has an irregular margin anteriorly (open arrowheads) indicating extracapsular extension.
Figure 11.16 T3b N2 bladder cancer. Coronal T2WI showing a large bladder tumor (T) extending into the perivesical fat (arrows). There is a large right obturator node (O) and small right external iliac node (E), of identical signal intensity to the primary tumor.
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Figure 11.17 M1 bladder cancer. Coronal T1WI showing multiple para-aortic (arrows) and aortocaval lymph node metastases (open arrow). Retroperitoneal nodes are considered to be distant metastases (M1) in the TNM staging of bladder carcinoma.
Figure 11.19 Post biopsy effect. (A, B) Sagittal T2WI through the bladder. In A, there is extensive abnormality of the bladder wall with intermediate signal thickening (open arrows), predominantly posteriorly with associated stranding of the perivesical fat (arrows), suggesting a stage T3b tumor. Thickening and irregularity of the bladder mucosa (open arrowhead) is also noted. B Three months later, these appearances have virtually resolved with no intervention and were due to biopsy-induced inflammation and edema. There is now some low signal intensity in this location, which is likely partly due to fibrosis (arrow).
Figure 11.18 M1 bladder cancer—bone metastasis. Coronal T1WI through the pelvis showing a left-sided bladder tumor (arrows). An intermediate signal lesion (M) is seen in left lesser trochanter of the femur due to a bony metastasis.
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Figure 11.20 Multifocal bladder cancer. Coronal T2WI. There are multiple nodules of intermediate signal tumor (arrows) involving the superficial bladder muscle. Some lesions show extension into the deep muscle layers (open arrow). Tumor (T) is also noted to extend into the defect (D) from a transurethral resection of the prostate performed for benign prostatic hyperplasia. This tumor also extends along the right levator ani muscle (arrowheads) which increases the T stage to T4b.
Figure 11.21 Multifocal bladder cancer. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T2WI showing multifocal intermediate signal intensity papillary tumors (arrows) involving the superficial bladder muscle. A low-signal stalk is noted (arrowhead). The low-signal bladder muscle layer is intact.
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Figure 11.22 Diffuse bladder cancer with layering. Coronal T2WI through the bladder. Extensive tumor (T) is seen spreading circumferentially around the bladder wall with components superficial and deep to the muscle layer, which appears intact between them (arrowheads). This is therefore T3b disease. This is an unusual appearance, but important as the deep component could easily be missed at biopsy. Small perivesical and pelvic sidewall nodes (N) are noted.
Figure 11.23 T3b bladder cancer with tumor extending into the left ureter. (A) Sagittal and (B) coronal T2WI through the bladder demonstrate a T3b tumor (T) involving the left bladder wall and base and extending into the lower left ureter. There is a left-sided hydroureter (H) with layering of urine and debris or hemorrhage seen in the ureter (arrow). Hydronephrosis and/or tumor extension into the ureter does not alter the tumor stage but is associated with a worse prognosis.
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Figure 11.24 Urachal cancer. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI showing tumor (T) extending along the obliterated urachus (median umbilical ligament) adjacent to the anterior bladder wall (arrow). This type of tumor is most commonly an adenocarcinoma. The uterus (U) contains multiple fibroids.
Figure 11.25 Treatment-related change following cystectomy and radiotherapy. Sagittal T2WI. A small postoperative fluid collection (asterisk) is seen in the bladder bed and there are low-signal fibrotic bands causing tethering of the sigmoid colon (arrow).
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Figure 11.26 Treatment-related change following localized radiotherapy. Transaxial T2WI showing low-signal thickening of the left posterolateral bladder wall (arrow) due to fibrosis and resulting in a left-sided hydronephrosis (asterisk). The bladder is tethered to the anterior vagina (open arrow).
Figure 11.27 Tumor recurrence post cystectomy. Transaxial T2WI in a patient who had a previous cystectomy for bladder cancer demonstrating an intermediate signal intensity tumor recurrence (R) in the urethral bed and also a bone metastasis in the left inferior pubic ramus (M).
Figure 11.28 DWI of primary tumor. (A) Transaxial T2WI, (B) transaxial b1000 DWI image, and (C) transaxial ADC image showing generalized thickening of the bladder wall (arrow) with more focal thickening posteriorly (open arrow) and stranding of the perivesical fat. This posterior area demonstrates restricted diffusion and a low ADC consistent with tumor. A right obturator node is seen (arrowhead).
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Figure 11.29 DWI and dynamic contrast imaging. (A) Transaxial T2WI through the bladder demonstrating an ill-defined lesion in the left anterolateral bladder wall (arrow) with stranding extending into the perivesical fat. It is difficult to be sure how much of the abnormality is due to tumor and how much is postbiopsy change. The diffusion-weighted images with increasing B values (B) with b = 600 msec and (C) with b = 1000 msec demonstrate a small region of restricted diffusion (open arrow) within the center of the lesion. This has a low ADC (D). These findings indicate that there is residual tumor within a larger area of biopsy-induced inflammation. (E) Enhancement curve for a region of interest over the area of thickening. This demonstrates very intense rapid enhancement, which plateaus quickly and is the typical profile for malignancy. (F) Transaxial T2WI through the same section of bladder after treatment with neoadjuvant chemotherapy. There is significant residual thickening in the region of the previous tumor (arrow), and on T2WI alone it is impossible to decide whether there is residual tumor at this site. Analysis of the enhancement curve for this region shows slow gradual enhancement which is typical of posttreatment effect, and this can easily be distinguished from the enhancement profile of the original tumor.
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Figure 11.29 (Continued )
FURTHER READING Barentsz JO, Jager GJ, Witjes JA. MR imaging of the urinary bladder. Magn Reson Imaging Clin N Am 2000; 8(4):853–867. Good description of technique. MacVicar D, ed. Contemporary issues in cancer imaging. Carcinoma of the Bladder. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2008. Comprehensive overview of bladder cancer imaging and treatment. Robinson P, Collins CD, Ryder WD, et al. Relationship of MRI and clinical staging to outcome in invasive bladder carcinoma treated
with radiotherapy. Clin Radiol 2000; 55(4):301–306. Identifies the most important findings on MR that alter prognosis. Takeuchi M, Sasaki S, Ito M, et al. Urinary bladder cancer: diffusionweighted MR imaging—accuracy for diagnosing T stage and estimating histologic grade. Radiology 2009; 251:112–121. This paper has good images and schema to help you in the practical use of DWI. Vikram R, Sandler CM, Ng CS. Imaging and staging of transitional cell carcinoma: part 1, lower urinary tract. AJR Am J Roentgenol 2009; 192(6):1481–1487. Good overview.
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12 Prostate cancer Claire Barker
BACKGROUND INFORMATION Epidemiology Worldwide, over 670,000 men are diagnosed with prostate cancer each year. The highest rates are in North America, Australasia, and North West Europe. The incidence is rising, although much of this increase is due to increased detection through more prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing. In the United Kingdom, prostate cancer is now the most common male cancer and is the second leading cause of male cancer deaths after lung cancer. Incidence statistics may be misleading, however, due to the high prevalence of occult disease. Age is the most important risk factor in developing prostate cancer with 60% of cases diagnosed in men over 70. Clinical disease is rare in men below 50. However, approximately 50% of men in their 50s are reported to have histological evidence of prostate cancer at postmortem.
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Histopathology Nearly all prostate cancers are adenocarcinomas. Rare tumors include squamous and transitional cell carcinomas and sarcomas. The most widely used classification system is the Gleason score. This is calculated as the sum of the two predominant cell types within the resected tumor tissue. The combined score can be further subgrouped into grades 2 to 4 (well differentiated), 5 to 7 (moderately differentiated), and 8 to 10 (poorly differentiated). Approximately 75% of tumors arise in the peripheral zone of the gland, 15% in the transition zone, and 10% in the central zone.
Patterns of Tumor Spread The outer prostatic “capsule” is strictly a pseudocapsule of fibromuscular tissue inseparable from the prostatic tissue. Prostate cancer spreads locally through the pseudocapsule to involve the periprostatic connective tissues, seminal vesicles, bladder base, and pelvic floor. The rectum is usually spared, as Denonvillier’s fascia forms a barrier to direct tumor extension. Regional lymphatic spread to nodes within the true pelvis occurs most frequently to the obturator nodes, with the pararectal, presacral and internal iliac nodal groups also commonly involved. Distant spread to lymph nodes outside the true pelvis may also occur. Hematogenous spread occurs through the periprostatic venous plexus, producing bone metastases particularly in the pelvic girdle and spine, via the spinal veins. Other common sites for metastatic disease are the liver and lung.
Treatment The management of prostate cancer continues to be the subject of much debate with no consensus on the best treatment for early prostate cancer. Watchful waiting with deferred treatment is a valid option, especially for well-differentiated low-risk localized tumors in elderly patients, who have a normal life expectancy of less than 10 years. This has to be weighed against an increased risk of interval disease progression and the potential complications of other treatments. l
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Prognostic Indicators Outcome/prognosis depends on: l
TNM stage. This is the most important prognostic variable. The five-year disease-specific survival for patients with
disease confined to the prostate (T2 or less) is over 90% but only approximately 30% for men with metastatic disease (M1) at presentation. The Gleason score. The 10-year disease-specific survival for clinically localized disease (managed conservatively) is 87% for well and moderately differentiated tumors, dropping to 34% for poorly differentiated tumors. PSA level. High levels correlate with advanced TNM stage at diagnosis, and a rising PSA post treatment is suggestive of tumor recurrence. Overlaps in PSA ranges, however, limit staging accuracy for individual patients. Newly diagnosed asymptomatic patients with a PSA less than 10 ng/L have a very low risk of skeletal metastases so that routine radionuclide bone imaging is not considered necessary. Tumor volume. Number of positive biopsies on transrectal ultrasound (TRUS). Tumor neovascularization and molecular tumor cell–specific markers are the subject of ongoing research.
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Active surveillance, in order to prevent overtreatment, is for men with low-risk localized tumors which are suitable for radical treatment if their disease progresses. Disease is monitored with regular PSA testing, digital rectal examination, and repeat biopsies as necessary. For men with intermediate risk disease, there is a choice of active surveillance or radical treatment with or without hormone therapy. There are choices for the radical treatment of high-risk patients dependent on the grade and stage of tumor and the prostate volume. Radical prostatectomy is a curative treatment option for patients with localized (T1-2N0M0) prostate cancer. Some centers restrict surgery to patients with a Gleason score less than 7 and PSA less than 20 ng/ mL due to increased risk of occult extracapsular disease at higher PSA levels. The main advantages of surgery are that definitive staging is possible, PSA levels are reliably suppressed following treatment and radiotherapy remains an option for locally recurrent disease. External beam radiotherapy (EBRT), including conformal radiotherapy, may also be offered with curative intent.
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PROSTATE CANCER Table 12.1 Prostate cancer: TNM Staging Classification 2010 TNM classification
Description of tumor extent
TX T0 T1
Primary tumor cannot be assessed No evidence of primary tumor Tumor identified on histology but not apparent clinically or radiologically Tumor is an incidental finding in <5% resected tissue Tumor is an incidental finding in >5% resected tissue Tumor identified only on needle biopsy Tumor palpable or visible on imaging confined to the prostate Tumor involves one-half of one lobe or less Tumor involves more than one-half of one lobe Tumor involves both lobes Tumor extends through the prostatic pseudocapsule Extracapsular extension Invading the seminal vesicle(s) Tumor fixed or invading adjacent structures other than seminal vesicles: bladder neck, external sphincter, rectum, levator muscles, pelvic sidewall No lymph nodes involved Regional nodal metastases No distant metastases Distant metastases Nonregional lymph nodes Bone metastases Other sites involved þ/ bone metastases
T1a T1b T1c T2 T2a T2b T2c T3 T3a T3b T4
N0 N1 M0 M1 M1a M1b M1c
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field artifact although the latest scanners have software to overcome this problem. l
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Thin section T2-weighted turbo spin echo sequences are essential for differentiating normal internal zonal prostatic anatomy and pathology. The prostate and seminal vesicles must be covered in their entirety. Off-axis imaging, parallel to the prostate, can be helpful in evaluating extraprostatic extension. T1-weighted spin echo images are useful for detecting enlarged pelvic lymph nodes, bone metastases, and in identifying postbiopsy hemorrhage. Fat-suppressed imaging has no staging benefit over conventional T1- and T2weighted spin echo sequences. Dynamic gadoliniumenhanced imaging can improve tumor recognition and staging accuracy but is not widely used. In some centers, MRI is now supplemented with magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) with an increase in the choline: citrate ratio seen in prostatic tumor. MRS, particularly when performed with an ERC, can been used to determine the presence and location of tumor within the prostate and regional lymph nodes and to improve the assessment of extraglandular extension. With experience, dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) can significantly improve tumor localization in prostate cancer. DWI may also become a useful adjunct to MRI for differentiating recurrent tumor from posttreatment effect.
Current Indications
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Radical radiotherapy is suitable for patients with clinically localized disease (T1-2N0M0) and locally advanced tumors (T3N0M0) after “down staging” with hormonal therapy. Radiotherapy has similar results to surgery and can be administered on an outpatient basis without the need for a major operation. Brachytherapy, the implantation of radioactive seeds into the prostate, is gaining popularity but is only available in specialist centers. This technique delivers focal high-dose radiation to the prostate gland with relative sparing of the surrounding tissues. Criteria are more stringent than for EBRT and currently only small-volume, low-risk T2N0M0 tumors are considered. Metastatic disease is managed by a combination of hormone therapy and palliative radiotherapy. Radioactive strontium can be effective for diffuse bone metastases. Chemotherapy for hormone refractory disease is the subject of ongoing clinical trials.
The indications for MRI depend on local surgical and oncology practice, the availability of MRI and local radiological expertise. Many centers do not perform routine MRI, instead relying on clinical assessment (digital rectal examination) combined with PSA level and Gleason grade to predict tumor stage. l
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MRI OF PROSTATE CANCER Technique MRI evaluation of the prostate requires optimal technique using phased-array pelvic surface coils. Endorectal coils (ERCs) used either alone or in combination with pelvic phased-array coils have been shown to improve staging accuracy by better depiction of pseudocapsular penetration. ERCs have the potential drawbacks of causing patient discomfort with consequent movement artifact and also of producing near
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MRI can provide additional useful information in assessing for extracapsular tumor and seminal vesicle invasion. Decision analysis studies indicate MRI is most helpful in patients with an intermediate clinical risk of extracapsular extension (clinically localized at digital rectal exam (DRE), PSA level more than or equal to 10–20 ng/mL, Gleason score of 5–7). In these circumstances, MRI findings of extracapsular disease can stratify patients into low- and high-risk groups for disease progression, based on PSA levels at three years posttreatment. This information may influence the choice of treatment modality and the decision to offer adjuvant hormonal therapy. MRI is useful in the selection of patients for brachytherapy. Accurate staging information is essential, as disease must be contained within the prostatic pseudocapsule (T1-2 N0 M0). Despite the low positive predictive value of MRI, features suggestive of extracapsular extension are usually taken as a contraindication to treatment. MRI can also give an accurate assessment of prostatic volume, which ideally should be less than 60 cm3. MRI may assist radiotherapy planning for locally advanced disease. The greater soft tissue contrast and multiplanar capabilities of MRI provide a more accurate assessment of disease extent and involvement of adjacent organs. Fusion imaging systems are in development to facilitate radiotherapy planning using MRI data.
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alence in the population studied. Most published results give positive predictive values below 50%, indicating MRI usually overcalls extracapsular disease extension prior to radical prostatectomy. It is recognized that pathological stage is an imperfect gold standard, however, and selected histological sections may miss extracapsular disease extension if the gross specimen is not evaluated throughout.
MRI may also be useful in evaluating patients with a rising PSA following radical prostatectomy. Locally recurrent tumors or isolated lymph nodes may be suitable for salvage radiotherapy in the absence of more widespread disease.
Imaging Features Prostate cancer occurs in the peripheral zone in 75% of patients and usually has low signal intensity compared to the normal high signal of the peripheral zone on T2 weighted turbo spin echo images. Tumors outside of the peripheral zone may be indistinguishable from normal tissue or the heterogeneous signal of benign prostatic hyperplasia. The prostatic pseudocapsule is seen as a thin band of low signal between the peripheral zone and periprostatic connective tissue. In addition to frank extracapsular tumor, features suggestive of capsular penetration are capsular retraction, focal capsular bulging, periprostatic stranding, capsular thickening, and tumor contiguity with the pseudocapsule of more than 12 mm. Extension into the seminal vesicles is suggested by replacement of normal high signal with intermediate signal tumor in continuity with intraprostatic disease. This is often best seen on the coronal sequence. Following radiotherapy, the prostate gland shrinks and the peripheral zone becomes intermediate signal intensity on T2-weighted imaging. After radical prostatectomy, residual fibrosis in the prostatic bed has low signal intensity on all sequences. This may be differentiated from the intermediate signal intensity of recurrent tumor on T2-weighted images.
Staging Accuracy MRI offers the single most accurate imaging assessment of local disease and regional metastatic spread. The integration of MRI findings with standard clinical diagnostic tests has also been shown to improve the overall accuracy of prostate cancer staging. A meta-analysis of studies evaluating MRI staging accuracy in patients with clinically localized prostate cancer produced a maximum combined sensitivity and specificity on the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve of 74%, using pathological stage as the gold standard. At a specificity of 80% on the ROC curve, sensitivity was 69%. l
As with any diagnostic test, however, the positive and negative predictive values will vary according to the prev-
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Signal changes within the prostate should be interpreted with caution as other pathological processes may mimic prostate cancer. Infection, inflammation, and hemorrhage will all produce low-signal changes within the peripheral zone on T2-weighted imaging which can be confused with cancer. It is important to check for T1WI high signal within the prostate peripheral zone to exclude postbiopsy hemorrhage. The normal fibromuscular bands of the peripheral zone may also appear thickened as a normal variant and should not be confused with tumor. Staging accuracy is reduced following TRUS-guided biopsy. Evaluation of extracapsular extension is particularly difficult if the pseudocapsule or seminal vesicles have been subjected to multiple biopsies in an attempt to gain pathological evidence of locally advanced disease. Signal characteristics may be helpful as, unlike tumor, methemoglobin within hemorrhage is high signal on T1-weighted imaging. If equivocal findings are present, radical treatment can be deferred and the MRI repeated, as postbiopsy changes will resolve with time, although this may take several months. Similarly, signal changes within and around the seminal vesicles can be misinterpreted on MRI imaging. Hemorrhage, inflammatory scarring, stones, and amyloid can all produce focal abnormalities and tubular thickening. Normal fibrous tissue around the ejaculatory ducts and inferomedial tips of the seminal vesicles can also be misdiagnosed as tumor. Some published reports have disregarded signal changes in the seminal vesicles unless there is evidence of tumor within the adjacent prostate on TRUS biopsy. Post prostatectomy, the unresected tips of the seminal vesicles may be misinterpreted as residual or recurrent tumor.
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Figure 12.1 Normal prostate anatomy. (A) Transaxial T2WI. The normal zonal anatomy of the prostate is well demonstrated on T2WI. The central gland (C) is comprised of central and transition zones and encloses the urethra. These zones are low signal on T2WI and may thus mask any low-signal tumor within. Seventy-five percent of tumors arise in the peripheral zone (P) of the gland and are usually well demarcated from the high-signal glandular stroma. The pseudocapsule is seen as a thin surrounding low-signal band (arrowheads). Lateral to the pseudocapsule, the high-signal periprostatic venous plexus (V) can sometimes cause confusion as to the true margin of the gland. The neurovascular bundles supplying the corpora cavernosa are positioned at the 5 and 7 o’clock positions, (long arrows) just outside the pseudocapsule. The rectum (R) is closely applied to the prostate separated by the thin low-signal Denonvilliers’ fascia. The bladder (B) may be seen anteriorly on transaxial sections. (B) Coronal T2WI. The seminal vesicles (S) are high signal with regular thin-walled tubules. The prostate sits within the levator sling (L), laterally, the obturator internus muscles (O) form the pelvic sidewalls. There is a cyst in the midline (C).
Figure 12.2 Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). Transaxial T2WI. BPH results in enlargement of the transition zone of the gland. The peripheral zone is thinned (short arrows), and the normal high signal intensity may diminish, although not usually to the extent seen with tumor infiltration. The hypertrophied transition zone (TZ) has heterogeneous signal on T2W.
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Figure 12.3 Stage T2a prostate cancer. Transaxial T2WI. Lowsignal tumor (arrow) is seen within the peripheral zone of the right lobe of the prostate. Changes of BPH are noted. The tumor occupies less than one-half of one lobe indicating stage T2a disease. There is no evidence of extension beyond the pseudocapsule. Abbreviation: BPH, benign prostatic hyperplasia.
Figure 12.4 Stage T2b prostate cancer. Transaxial T2WI. Lowsignal intensity tumor (arrow) is involving more than one-half of one lobe and is classified as T2b. The low signal is contiguous with the pseudocapsule for >12 mm, which increases the probability of microscopic extracapsular disease. This may influence patient selection for brachytherapy or other radical treatments.
Figure 12.5 Stage T2c prostate cancer. Transaxial T2WI. Tumor (arrows) involves both lobes, crossing the midline. Tumor is also seen within the central gland (T). There is no extracapsular extension.
Figure 12.6 Stage T3a prostate cancer. Transaxial T2WI. Extracapsular extension is most commonly seen from the posterior and lateral aspects of the prostate, often in the region of the neurovascular bundle. Here, small-volume, low-signal tumor (arrow) breaches the prostatic pseudocapsule on the right, indicating stage T3a disease.
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Figure 12.7 Stage T3a prostate cancer. Transaxial T2WI. Tumor in the central gland (arrows) can breach the anterior pseudocapsule extending into the fat deep to the symphysis pubis. Anterior extracapsular extension is not detectable clinically.
Figure 12.8 Stage T3b prostate cancer. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI. Low-signal tumor (T) within the peripheral zone is contiguous with tumor extending into base of the seminal vesicles (arrow). An enlarged presacral node is also present (arrowhead). Tumor is seen within the left seminal vesicle (arrow in B) replacing the normal high T2W signal as seen on the right. (C) Transaxial T2WI in a different patient. Low signal is seen in the right peripheral zone in keeping with tumor. There are indirect signs of extracapsular disease as the pseudocapsule is retracted and thickened (arrowheads), and there is contiguity with the tumor over a prolonged distance (>12 mm). Both seminal vesicles and ejaculatory ducts (arrows) are replaced with material of similar signal intensity indicating T3b disease. (Continued)
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Figure 12.8 (Continued )
Figure 12.9 Stage T3a/T4 prostate cancer. Transaxial T2WI. There is extracapsular tumor extension (arrows) into the right neurovascular bundle (arrowhead) and posteriorly to the right levator muscle (L). MR staging is equivocal and clinical correlation may be required to distinguish between stage T3a and stage T4 disease. In stage T4 disease, the tumor is “fixed” to the pelvic sidewall.
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Figure 12.10 Stage T4 prostate cancer. Transaxial T2WI. There is nodular extracapsular extension of tumor on the right extending to the right levator muscle and rectum (arrows). A right anatomical obturator node (arrowhead) is also present in the obturator foramen.
Figure 12.11 Stage T4 prostate cancer. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T2WI. Tumor (T) extends to the right pelvic sidewall (arrows). Bilateral hydroureters (arrowheads) are present due to invasion of the bladder trigone (crossed arrows). A trace of ascites (A) is seen in the rectovesical pouch. Several small perirectal nodes (N) are noted. In B, bilateral hydroureters (arrowheads) and further perirectal nodes (N) are demonstrated.
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Figure 12.13 Post prostatectomy tumor recurrence. Transaxial T2WI. Following radical prostatectomy, there is normally a ring of low signal representing postoperative fibrosis in the prostatic bed. Recurrent tumor usually shows as an area of intermediate signal intensity within the fibrotic tissue or adjacent periprostatic fat. In this example, the recurrent tumor (arrow) is present between the 7 and 9 o’clock positions within the fibrous ring.
Figure 12.12 Stage T4 prostate cancer. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI. There is an extensive tumor (T) infiltrating the bladder (arrowheads) and rectum (arrow). A catheter balloon (B) is in situ. Inferiorly, disease extends through the pelvic floor into the perineum (asterisk). Marrow hyperplasia due to anemia accounts for the signal change in the sacrum (S). Figure 12.14 Post radiotherapy tumor metastasis. Transaxial T2WI. Following radiotherapy, the prostate gland reduces in size and signal intensity decreases on T2WI, most obviously in the peripheral zone. Local tumor recurrence is usually heralded by a rise in PSA. This patient with a rising PSA had developed a bone metastasis (arrow) in the right ischium. Abbreviation: PSA, prostatespecific antigen
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Figure 12.15 Tumor recurrence. (A) Transaxial T2WI, (B) DWI b100, (C) DWI b1000, and (D) ADC. Tumor recurrence within the peripheral zone on the left (arrow) extends laterally to involve the levator ani muscle (arrowhead). There is restricted diffusion on DWI, especially at high b values (arrow) with a corresponding low ADC (arrow) in D. Abbreviations: ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging.
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Figure 12.16 Stage N1 prostate cancer. Coronal T2WI. There is a large left external iliac nodal metastasis (long arrow). A small right external iliac node has similar signal intensity and is also likely to be involved (short arrow). The obturator and iliac nodes are most commonly involved in prostate cancer. Local extracapsular tumor extension is seen from the right side of the prostate (arrowhead) abutting the levator ani muscle (L) on the right.
Figure 12.17 Stage N1 prostate cancer. Sagittal T2WI. Presacral lymph node metastasis (arrow) in a patient with a T4 prostatic tumor (T) involving the bladder base (arrowhead) and seminal vesicles (crossed arrow).
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Figure 12.18 Stage N1 prostate cancer. Transaxial T2WI. Bulky T4 prostate cancer (T) with extracapsular extension. There are extensive nodal metastases within right internal iliac (arrow), left external iliac (arrowhead), and perirectal (crossed arrow) nodes with extracapsular extension.
Figure 12.19 Stage M1a prostate cancer. Coronal T1WI. Multiple interaortocaval and para-aortic retroperitoneal lymph nodes are present (arrows), indicating stage M1a disease in addition to bilateral common and external iliac nodes (arrowheads). A transaxial upper T1W block of images may assist in equivocal cases.
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Figure 12.20 Stage M1b prostate cancer. Coronal T1WI. Prostate tumor (T) with multiple bone metastases involving the pelvis and lumbar spine (arrows) indicating stage M1b disease.
Figure 12.21 Stage M1c prostate cancer. (A) Transaxial T1WI. There are multiple hepatic metastases (arrows). Extraskeletal nonlymph node metastases are classified as stage M1c disease. (B) Transaxial T2WI in a different patient. An unusual metastasis is seen within the left spermatic cord (arrow). The metastasis is differentiated from an inguinal lymph node by its medial position, similar to the uninvolved right spermatic cord, and the compressed left spermatic cord structures (arrowheads) seen posteriorly. Note also a metastasis (asterisk) in the right pubic bone and other smaller bone metastases throughout the pelvis. Incidental left iliopsoas bursa (crossed arrow). (C) Sagittal T2WI in a different patient. There is a metastasis within the corpus spongiosum of the penis (arrow) in a patient who had previously undergone radical prostatectomy. Note the postsurgical fibrosis (open arrows) in the prostate bed. This is stage M1c disease. (Continued)
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Figure 12.21 (Continued )
Figure 12.22 Post-brachytherapy implantation. Transaxial T2WI. Multiple brachytherapy seeds (arrows) result in low-signal foci throughout the prostate gland. Low-signal areas may be seen within the prostate gland as a result of radiation effect.
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Figure 12.23 Fibromuscular bands. Transaxial T2WI. The fibromuscular bands traversing the peripheral zone may appear prominent, as a normal variant (arrows). These linear radial bands should be easily distinguished from the more amorphous mass-like, lowsignal change representing tumor infiltration.
Figure 12.25 Post biopsy hemorrhage. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) T2WI. There is post biopsy hemorrhage producing an asymmetric left-sided bulge to the prostate peripheral zone. Methemoglobin accounts for the high signal on the T1W and T2W images (arrows). Low signal in the right peripheral zone of the prostate is consistent with tumor (arrowheads). The signal changes associated with hemorrhage evolve over several weeks and, depending on the stage of evolution, hemorrhage may either mask or simulate tumor in the peripheral zone on T2-weighted images. Repeat imaging can help in equivocal cases, but, in our experience, changes can persist up to three months. Figure 12.24 Prostatitis. Transaxial T2WI. This patient had prostatitis producing diffuse low-signal change throughout the peripheral zone. Tumor and inflammation may be indistinguishable on MRI and prostatic biopsy is required to diagnose tumor in the absence of widespread metastatic disease. Abbreviation: MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
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Figure 12.26 False positive seminal vesicle invasion. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T2WI. A localized increase in fibrous tissue (arrows) is normally found around the insertion of the vas deferens and origin of the ejaculatory ducts, which may encompass the medial portions of the seminal vesicles. This should not be interpreted as tumor invasion (stage T3b) unless there is contiguous tumor extending from the adjacent prostate.
FURTHER READING Hricak H, Choyke PL, Eberhardt SC, et al. Imaging prostate cancer: a multidisciplinary perspective. Radiology 2007; 243:28–53. An overview of prostate imaging. Huang Y, Isharwal S, Haese A, et al. Prediction of patient-specific risk and percentile cohort risk of pathological stage outcome using continuous prostate-specific antigen measurement, clinical stage and biopsy Gleason score. BJU Int 2010; 107:1562–1569. A recent online update based on Partin’s tables. An online computer program has been developed from the 2010 Partin Nomogram for predicting patient-specific pathological stage outcome at www.urology.jhu.edu/prostate/partintables.php. Kirby RS, Patel MJ. Fast Facts: Prostate Cancer. 6th ed. Oxford, UK: Health Press, 2009. Concise overview of the diagnosis and management of prostate cancer. Prostate cancer. Cancer Research UK, 2008. Background data and statistics relating to prostate cancer.
Qayyum A. Diffusion-weighted imaging in the abdomen and pelvis: concepts and applications. Radiographics 2009; 29:1797–1810. An overview of DWI in the abdomen and pelvis. Ramchandani P, ed. Preface. Radiol Clin N Am: Prostate Imaging, 2006; 44(5):xi. A further review of prostate imaging. Royal College of Radiologists Clinical Oncology Information Network and British Association of Urological Surgeons. Guidelines on the management of prostate cancer. Clin Oncol 1999; 11:55–81. Also known as the UK COIN guidelines. Zelefsky MJ, Eastham JA, Oliver OA. Cancer of the prostate. DeVita, Hellman and Rosenberg’s Cancer Principles and Practice of Oncology. 8th ed. In: DeVita VT, Lawrence TS, Rosenberg SA, eds. Philadelphia, USA: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins, 2008:1392– 1451. A comprehensive review of the management of prostate cancer. Zhang J, Hudolin T, Hricak H. Prostate cancer. In: Husband J, Resnick H, eds. Imaging in Oncology. 3rd ed. Colchester, UK: Informa Healthcare, 2010:348–370. Aimed at the clinical radiologist, this up-todate textbook has a detailed chapter reviewing prostate cancer imaging.
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13 Penile cancer Rohit Kochhar and M. Ben Taylor
BACKGROUND INFORMATION Epidemiology Malignant lesions of the penis are rare in developed nations and constitute only 0.4% to 0.6% of all cancer types in males, compared with 10% to 22% in some developing countries. Around 470 men are diagnosed each year in the United Kingdom with penile cancer, compared to more than 36,000 cases of prostate cancer. Penile cancer is more common in the elderly and most cases are in men over 60. First-degree relatives of men with penile squamous cell cancer (SCC) have about eight times the risk of developing penile SCC compared to men without a family history. Genital wart infection with human papilloma virus (HPV) increases penile cancer risk, and around 5 out of 10 men with penile cancer have HPV infection. HPV 16 and HPV 18 are most frequently linked to penile cancer. Other risk factors include smoking and immunosuppression. Factors that lower risk include being circumcised and good personal hygiene.
Histopathology More than 90% of penile malignancies are SCC. SCC can develop anywhere on the penis, with the glans penis (48%) being the most common site. Other sites in decreasing order of frequency are the prepuce (21%), the glans together with the prepuce (9%), the coronal sulcus (6%), and the shaft (2%). Verrucous carcinoma is a rare type of squamous cell penile cancer with an exophytic, wart-like appearance, which is slow growing and rarely metastasizes. Approximately 5% of penile cancers are adenocarcinomas, which develop in the glandular cells that produce sweat in the skin of the penis. Other histological types reported include basal cell carcinoma (2%), melanoma (2%), and sarcoma (1%). Metastases to the penis are rare and usually occur in the setting of widespread metastatic disease. The most frequent primary cancers to metastasize to the penis are genitourinary tumors and rectosigmoid carcinoma, with prostate and bladder being the commonest primary sites.
Patterns of Tumor Spread SCC of the penis is usually an indolent disease, slowly growing over many years and becoming locally extensive before distant metastases occur. The TNM staging classification for penile cancer is given in Table 13.1 and the anatomical stage/prognostic groups in Table 13.2. The location of the primary determines the site of lymphatic spread. Lymphatic drainage from the skin and prepuce is to the superficial inguinal nodes, from the glans is to the deep inguinal and external iliac nodes and from the corpora and penile urethra is to the internal iliac nodes. Free communication
of lymphatics from side to side often results in bilateral lymph node metastases. Importantly, metastases to iliac nodes are rare in the absence of inguinal metastases. Between 30% and 60% of patients with penile carcinoma have palpable inguinal nodes at presentation, but nearly half of these are reactive. In addition, metastatic nodes may be nonpalpable, and 15% of patients without palpable nodes have positive nodal histology after standard groin dissection. Hematogenous metastases typically develop late in the course of the disease and occur most commonly in the lungs and liver.
Prognostic Indicators The overall prognosis of penile cancer depends on the stage and histological grade of the primary tumor and the presence or absence of lymph node metastases. For men with the very earliest stage, that is penile carcinoma in situ, over 90% will be alive at five years. The most important prognostic factor is the presence and degree of lymph node involvement. The prevalence of nodal disease is related to the stage of the primary lesion and occurs in 20% of T1 penile cancers and in 47% to 66% of T2–T4 tumors. For men who have metastases limited to one inguinal lymph node, just over 80% will live for at least five years. If more than two inguinal lymph nodes or lymph nodes in the abdomen are positive then around 40% live for at least five years. Distant metastases are uncommon at the time of clinical presentation, occurring in <3% of cases and are associated with a poorer prognosis.
Treatment The management of carcinoma of the penis is evolving and in the U.K. NICE (National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence) recommends that all patients with penile cancer are referred to a specialist team. Treatment decisions are based on the site, stage, and grade of the primary cancer and the presence of metastatic inguinal lymph nodes. The three standard treatment options are surgery, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy. However, surgery is the most common treatment for all stages of penile cancer. Men with early stage tumors are increasingly managed with penile-sparing surgery, but partial or total penectomy remain the standard of care for locally advanced lesions. Inguinal node dissection can be done at the time of initial surgery or sentinel node biopsy can be performed followed by surgery. Other treatment options being tested in clinical trials include biological therapy and radiosensitizers.
Treatment Options by Stage Patients with carcinoma in situ (stage 0) can be treated with Mohs microsurgery, topical chemotherapy, topical biological therapy, laser surgery, or cryosurgery.
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Table 13.1 TNM Classification of Penile Carcinoma Primary tumor (T)
Description of tumor extent
TX T0 Tis Ta T1a
T2 T3 T4
Cannot assess primary tumor Primary tumor not evident Carcinoma in situ Noninvasive verrucous carcinomaa Tumor invades the subepithelial connective tissue without lymph vascular invasion and not poorly differentiated (e.g., grades 3–4) Tumor invades the subepithelial connective tissue with lymph vascular invasion or is poorly differentiated Tumor invades the corpus spongiosum or cavernosum Tumor invades the urethra Tumour invades other adjacent organs
Regional lymph nodes (N) cNX cN0 cN1 cN2 cN3
Clinical stage definitionb Cannot assess regional nodes No palpable or visibly enlarged inguinal nodes Palpable and mobile unilateral inguinal node Palpable and mobile multiple or bilateral inguinal nodes Palpable fixed inguinal node or pelvic adenopathy (unilateral or bilateral)
Pathological stage definitionc pNX pN0 pN1 pN2 pN3
Cannot assess regional nodes No regional nodal metastasis Metastasis in one inguinal node Metastasis in multiple or bilateral inguinal nodes Extranodal extension of nodal metastasis or pelvic node(s) unilateral or bilateral
Distant metastasis (M) M0 M1
No distant metastasis Distant metastasis
T1b
a
Broad pushing penetration (invasion) is permitted; destructive invasion is against this diagnosis. Clinical stage definition based on palpation, imaging. c Pathologic stage definition based on biopsy or surgical excision. b
Table 13.2 Anatomic Stage/Prognostic Groups Stage 0 Stage I Stage II
Stage IIIa Stage IIIb Stage IV
Tis
N0
M0
Ta T1a T1b T2 T3 T1-3 T1-3 T4 Any T Any T1
N0 N0 N0 N0 N0 N1 N2 Any N N3 Any N
M0 M0 M0 M0 M0 M0 M0 M0 M0 M1
For stage I and II penile cancers the usual treatment is surgery, which is partial or total penectomy with or without removal of inguinal lymph nodes. For T1 tumors of the glans penis and the distal shaft partial penectomy is performed; a 2-cm proximal margin is considered adequate for local control. The aim is to leave enough of the shaft of the penis to enable the passage of urine while the patient is standing up. Total penectomy with perineal urethrostomy is usually reserved for T2 or T3 penile cancers. Total penectomy provides more comfortable micturition in the sitting position and is preferred over partial penectomy if adequate residual penile length cannot be achieved. Other options include external or internal radiation therapy or a clinical trial of laser therapy. Stage III and IV tumors are treated by penectomy or wide local excision and removal of lymph nodes in the groin, with or
without radiation therapy. Current clinical trials are investigating the role of chemotherapy before or after surgery and of radiosensitizers.
MRI OF PENILE CANCER It has been customary to stage primary penile cancer by physical examination. However, clinical evaluation alone can often result in understaging the disease and imaging is used to complement the clinical findings. Ultrasound is useful in evaluating suspected penile masses and has been advised by the European Association of Urology for primary penile cancer deemed to invade the corpora cavernosa. On ultrasound SCC usually presents as a hypoechoic lesion with a heterogeneous appearance. Invasion of the corpora cavernosa and the corpus spongiosum is appreciable and tunica albuginea infiltration is seen as an interruption of the thin echogenic line of the tunica. However, experience has shown that ultrasound is unreliable especially in the presence of microscopic invasion and also in patients with advanced tumors that reach the base of the penis, in whom evaluating the proximal tumor extent can be difficult. CT of the abdomen and pelvis is routinely used to identify lymph node or visceral metastatic disease. With its superior soft tissue resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the most sensitive imaging modality for local staging of penile cancer. Tumor size, depth of tumor invasion, involvement of tunica, corpora, urethra, and extension to adjacent structures can be accurately depicted using MRI and this information is valuable for surgical planning.
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MRI Staging Accuracy Generally, the published results reviewing MRI staging accuracy in primary penile cancer have been limited by small patient numbers. In a larger series of 55 men diagnosed with invasive penile carcinoma on biopsy and locally staged with MRI, there was a good correlation between radiological and histological staging with an overall k-value of 0.75 (p < 0.001). Stage-specific sensitivities and specificities were: T1 (85%; 83%), T2 (75%; 89%), and T3 (88%; 98%). MRI accurately predicted corpora cavernosa invasion in all cases of pathologically proven disease. MRI was proven to be a highly accurate imaging modality for local staging of primary penile cancer and a reliable tool for selecting patients for conservative surgery.
Technique Appropriate positioning is the key to reduce organ motion during the examination. Techniques described include taping the dorsiflexed penis and the use of a 3- or 5-in. surface coil to obtain highresolution images. Imaging of the erect penis after injection of prostaglandin E1 into the corpora cavernosa has the potential to improve local staging by accentuating the contrast between the tunica and corpora cavernosa on T2-weighted images (T2WI), but there is insufficient published literature supporting this procedure. The protocol followed in our institute involves positioning the penis to point inferiorly in the midline. Taping the penis in the dorsiflexed position was uncomfortable for some of our patients, induced movement artifacts from abdominal breathing in some patients, and in our experience did not improve the image quality. Body matrix coils are placed to cover the pelvis and the abdomen. Hyoscine-n-butylybromide (Buscopan1) is routinely administered unless contraindicated. Sequences used are sagittal T2 turbo spin echo (TSE) including the penis anteriorly and sacrum posteriorly, coronal T2 TSE covering the penis anteriorly to the back of the bladder posteriorly, and axial T2 TSE in two contiguous blocks covering the pelvis and scrotum. The above sequences are performed on a 1.5-T magnet and use a 220-mm field of view (FOV) with a slice thickness of 3 mm. Coronal and axial T1-weighted sequences covering the abdomen and pelvis from the renal hilum to the symphysis pubis are then performed with a slice thickness of 5 mm. The T2-weighted sequences give excellent contrast resolution between the hypointense tunica albuginea and markedly hyperintense corpora cavernosa and spongiosum and are most useful for local staging. Pelvic lymph node assessment is performed on both the T1- and T2-weighted sequences. Contrast-enhanced MRI has not been shown to be helpful in determining the primary tumor margins and is not routinely performed in our institution. No current literature is available on the role of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) in staging primary penile cancer.
nodes often have a rounded shape and show signal intensity on MRI similar to that of the primary tumor. Nodes with these features should be considered pathological even if not enlarged. Central nodal necrosis is a characteristic feature of metastatic nodes but is useful only if present. The main problem in nodal staging is the presence of occult metastases in normal-sized nodes.
Metastatic Disease The lungs, liver, and retroperitoneum are the most common sites. CT has a limited role in local tumor assessment but is the favored modality to evaluate distant metastases.
Posttreatment Appearances MRI is used for follow-up after surgery because, despite adequate primary treatment, further progression can be seen in up to 40% of patients. Recurrences can occur at the surgical stump and also deep in the pelvis. Differentiation between recurrent tumor and posttreatment effect can be difficult and familiarity with normal postoperative MRI appearances is necessary. Recurrent lesions should be assessed carefully, because fibrosis can be misdiagnosed as malignancy. This is often difficult to assess on MRI; however, the superficial location of most lesions allows easy clinical evaluation. In addition, fibrotic scarring has low signal on both T1WI and T2WI as opposed to the intermediate T2WI signal of recurrent disease. Clinical assessment following groin dissection performed for lymph node metastases is difficult. Typical imaging appearances of posttreatment scarring and benign complications such as postoperative seromas can be easily diagnosed based on typical location and signal characteristics. Previous studies in patients with other pelvic cancers have suggested a role for dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI in differentiation of neoplastic tissue from fibrosis, due to earlier enhancement seen in the tumor. DWI may have a role in differentiating posttreatment change from recurrence. However, currently there is not enough evidence to support the routine use of the above techniques in patients with suspected recurrent penile cancer.
Pitfalls of MRI l
l
Imaging Features The MRI characteristics of primary penile carcinoma are variable, but the tumor is often a solitary, ill-defined, and infiltrating mass hypointense to the adjacent corpora on both T1- and T2WI. Penile metastases from another primary site are rare but are typically seen as multiple discrete nodules within the corpora cavernosa and corpus spongiosum demonstrating low signal intensity compared to the adjacent corpora.
l
l
Nodal Disease As with other pelvic malignancies, lymph nodes with a short-axis diameter greater than 1.0 cm in the pelvis and 1.5 cm in the inguinal regions are considered pathological, although the sensitivity and specificity of size criteria are limited. Metastatic lymph
l
Identifying the location and extent of the primary tumor can be problematical in penile cancer especially when the tumor is small and assessment is further limited by biopsyrelated changes. Reference to the clinical findings can guide the radiologist to the site of the primary tumor. In our institution, clinical photographs are available on PACS and are a useful reference for primary tumor site. High-resolution T2WI, in some cases imaging following prostaglandin injection, can increase tumor conspicuity. However, prostaglandin injection is not routinely used due to patient discomfort, and there is insufficient evidence in the literature to support its routine use. Difficulty in differentiating between T1 and early T2 tumors. Early infiltration of the corpora can be detected by disruption of the low signal of the combined fascia. Detecting local recurrence after partial or total penectomy when postsurgical changes in the skin and subcutaneous tissues can be mistaken for recurrent disease. The local site is therefore best evaluated clinically with biopsy confirmation and MRI is most useful to identify recurrence deep in the pelvis. Differentiating metastatic from reactive inguinal nodes is particularly difficult and has been discussed previously. In all suspected cases biopsy confirmation is advised. Ultrasound with biopsy is an extremely useful adjunct to MRI.
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Figure 13.1 Normal penile anatomy. (A, B) Sagittal, (C) coronal, and (D) transaxial T2WI showing the normal high-signal intensity corpus spongiosum (S), which forms the bulb of the penis (B) posteriorly and extends anteriorly the length of the penis to form the glans (G). The urethra is just visible as a linear low-signal intensity structure within the posterior corpus spongiosum (arrowheads in A). The paired cylindrical corpora cavernosa (C) lie dorsolaterally and also show high signal intensity, posteriorly these extend laterally to form the crura of the penis (Cr), which lie adjacent to the ischiopubic rami. The corpora cavernosa often show slightly lower signal intensity than the corpus spongiosum, due to differences in blood flow. The corpus spongiosum and corpora cavernosa are invested in an inner tunica albuginea and an outer Buck’s fascia, which are indistinguishable on MRI and form a low-signal combined fascia (arrows). The distal skin of the penis forms the foreskin (or prepuce) (crossed arrows in C), which covers the glans penis; this is often difficult to distinguish on MRI. In this patient, the site of symptoms has been marked with cod liver oil capsules on the skin of the penis (asterisks). There is a small amount of fluid incidentally seen within the scrotum (F). Abbreviations: E, epididymis; P, prostate; Sp, spermatic cord; SV, seminal vesicles; T, testis.
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Figure 13.2 T1 carcinoma of the penis. (A) Sagittal, (B) coronal, and (C) transaxial T2WI through the penis showing a heterogeneous tumor (T) involving the tip of the penis. In A and C, there is a clearly defined margin (arrows) between the tumor and the underlying glans (G), although this is not appreciated in B. Following partial penectomy, pathological evaluation showed that the tumor was confined to the foreskin, with no invasion of the glans, indicating T1 disease.
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Figure 13.3 Early T2 carcinoma of the penis. (A) Sagittal, (B) coronal, and (C) transaxial T2WI through the penis showing a lobulated tumor (T), which is inseparable from the glans (G). On clinical and gross pathological evaluation, the tumor appeared exophytic, with no gross infiltration of the glans; however, on histological evaluation, there was microscopic infiltration of the glans, indicating a T2 tumor. There is a 1 cm smooth, rounded left inguinal node (arrow in B), this is suspicious on MRI criteria, due to its rounded shape and its signal intensity being similar to the primary tumor but was found to be benign on biopsy and follow-up imaging. There is a small amount of fluid incidentally seen within the scrotum (F).
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Figure 13.4 T2 carcinoma of the penis. (A) Sagittal, (B) coronal, and (C) transaxial T2WI through the penis showing a poorly defined lowsignal tumor (T) within the right dorsal glans penis. The tumor abuts the combined fascia over the distal end of the corpora cavernosa (arrow in C) but does not infiltrate the corpora cavernosa, and there is no involvement of the urethra (arrowhead in C), indicating a T2 tumor.
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Figure 13.5 T2 Carcinoma of the penis. (A) Sagittal, (B) coronal, and (C) transaxial T2WI through the penis showing a large lobulated tumor (T) involving the glans penis. There is loss of definition of the combined fascia around the distal corpora cavernosa, indicating corpora cavernosa invasion (arrows). Despite the extensive tumor, the urethra (arrowhead in C) was not involved on pathological evaluation.
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Figure 13.6 T3 carcinoma of the penis demonstrating urethral infiltration within the glans. (A) Sagittal, (B) coronal, and (C) transaxial T2WI through the penis showing heterogeneous intermediate signal intensity tumor (T) involving the entire glans. The distal urethra is visible as an irregular slit showing central high signal (arrows). Following partial penectomy, pathological examination showed complete infiltration of the urethra by tumor.
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Figure 13.7 T3 Carcinoma of the penis showing proximal extension along the corpus spongiosum. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI through the penis. There is intermediate signal intensity tumor (T), which has a slightly lower and more heterogeneous signal than the normal corpus spongiosum. The tumor infiltrates along the shaft of the penis and the proximal extent is difficult to delineate (arrow in A). The transaxial image shows normal corpora cavernosa anteriorly (asterisks) and heterogeneous signal within the corpus spongiosum posteriorly (arrow in B) infiltrating around the urethra (arrowhead).
Figure 13.8 T3 carcinoma of the penis. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI through the penis showing heterogeneous tumor (T) involving the glans. There is mild dilatation of the urethra within the corpus spongiosum (arrow in A), indicating urethral obstruction and likely infiltration more distally. The transaxial image (B), at the level of the proximal glans, shows intermediate signal intensity tumor on the left (T), directly infiltrating the corpus spongiosum and involving the urethra (arrowheads).
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Figure 13.9 T3 carcinoma of the penis. (A) Sagittal, (B) coronal, and (C) transaxial T2WI through the penis showing heterogeneous intermediate intensity tumor (T) involving the glans penis and extending along the corpora cavernosa. The level of infiltration of the cavernosa is well delineated (arrows). In C, there is more extensive infiltration of the cavernosa on the left with engulfment of the dorsal artery (crossed arrow), whereas on the right the artery is not involved (open arrow). The proximal urethra is dilated (arrowheads), indicating obstruction of the urethra distally, consistent with T3 tumor. The skin of the scrotum is thickened on the right (large arrow in B and C), due to infiltration with tumor. There is incidental enlargement of the prostate (P) due to benign prostatic hyperplasia.
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Figure 13.10 T3 carcinoma of the penis with noncontiguous spread within the corpus cavernosa. (A, B) Sagittal and (C) coronal T2WI through the penis showing heterogeneous intensity tumor (T) involving the glans with a relatively well-delineated proximal margin (arrows). The distal urethra is involved, and there is mild dilatation of the penile urethra (arrowhead in A). There is a separate tumor nodule, more proximally, within the left corpus cavernosum (asterisk). This is an example of noncontiguous tumor spread, which is uncommon.
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Figure 13.11 T3 carcinoma of the penis with proximal extension. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI through the penis showing a large intermediate signal intensity, heterogeneous tumor (T), which involves the glans and extends proximally along the penile shaft, infiltrating both corpora cavernosa and the corpus spongiosum, but not extending into the penile crura (Cr in B). There are normal-sized lymph nodes in both groins, some of which show central fat signal intensity (arrowheads).
Figure 13.12 T4 carcinoma of the penis with tumor extension from the crus of the penis to the inferior pubic ramus. (A, B) Transaxial T2WI through the root of the penis showing intermediate to low-signal intensity tumor (T) within the penile bulb (open arrow) and the left penile crus (Cr). The tumor in the crus is inseparable from the cortex of the inferior pubic ramus (arrows) and in B, there is low-signal tumor within the bone itself (asterisks). This is consistent with direct tumor infiltration of bone and indicates T4 tumor.
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Figure 13.13 T4 carcinoma of the penis with tumor extension to the right pubic bone. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI showing a large intermediate signal intensity tumor (T), which replaces the external penis and infiltrates posteriorly along the corpora cavernosa (asterisks). On the left, the tumor abuts the body and inferior ramus of the pubic bone (arrow) and on the right the tumor infiltrates and destroys the pubic body and inferior pubic ramus, producing a large soft tissue mass (M) with a necrotic center (N). The urethra (arrowheads) is slightly dilated due to distal obstruction. There is a suprapubic catheter within the bladder (C). A small amount of free fluid (F) is seen in the pelvis. Abbreviations: P, peripheral zone of the prostate; S, seminal vesicle.
Figure 13.14 Left inguinal lymph node metastasis. Transaxial T2WI showing a slightly enlarged and lobulated lymph node medially in the left inguinal region (arrow), the node measures 1.5 cm in short axis and shows intermediate signal intensity, with no visible fatty hilum, these are features that are suspicious of metastasis. There is a normal-sized right inguinal node (arrowhead). Left inguinal lymph node dissection confirmed nodal metastasis.
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Figure 13.15 Metastases within normal-sized inguinal nodes. (A) Transverse and (B) coronal T2WI showing multiple bilateral inguinal nodes in a patient with penile carcinoma (with tumor (T) involving the glans in B). The nodes are of intermediate signal intensity (similar to the signal intensity of the primary tumor) and have lobulated contours (arrows), the largest node on the right measured 1.0 cm and on the left 0.8 cm in short axis. These nodes are indeterminate on MR appearance. Ultrasound-guided biopsy was performed and was positive for malignancy on the left but negative on the right. Bilateral inguinal lymph node dissection was performed and showed metastases in one out of seven nodes in the right groin and one out of eight nodes in the left groin. This case illustrates the difficulty of diagnosing nodal metastases on conventional MRI.
Figure 13.16 Normal appearance following partial penectomy. Sagittal T2WI showing amputation of the distal penis, the penile stump protrudes slightly beyond the abdominal wall and is partially covered by a flap of penile skin (arrows).
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Figure 13.17 Normal appearance following partial penectomy, with an irregular appearance at the penile stump. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI show partial penectomy. The skin over the penile stump is slightly thickened and irregular and shows heterogenous signal (arrows). This appearance remained stable with no evidence of clinical recurrence and is a normal postoperative appearance.
Figure 13.18 Normal appearance following total penectomy. (A) Sagittal, (B) coronal, and (C, D) transaxial T2WI through the pelvis. The penis has been amputated and the urethra (arrows) has been diverted onto the perineum. An irregular band of low-signal intensity fibrosis (open arrows in A and C) is seen anteriorly in the penile bed. A small portion of the bulb of the penis (corpus spongiosum) remains in situ and shows high signal intensity (asterisk). (Continued )
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Figure 13.18 (Continued )
Figure 13.19 Normal appearance following bilateral groin dissection. Transaxial T2WI through the inguinal region showing irregular low signal within both groins, anterior to the femoral vessels (arrows), more prominent on the left. This represents fibrosis and is an expected appearance following groin dissection. However, local tumor recurrence may be difficult to identify and interval reassessment may be required.
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Figure 13.20 Reactive inguinal node following partial penectomy and bilateral groin dissection. (A) Coronal T1WI, (B) transaxial T1WI, and (C) coronal T2WI in a patient who developed scrotal cellulitis four months following partial penectomy and bilateral groin dissection. There is irregular low signal in both groins (arrows), representing fibrosis, and marked edema within the scrotum (asterisks). There is an enlarged left inguinal node, which measured 1.6 cm in short axis (arrowheads), note that the node is clearly seen on T1WI but is difficult to distinguish on the T2WI in C as its signal intensity is identical to the surrounding fat. This node had enlarged from previously and was initially considered highly suspicious of a lymph node metastasis. (D) Transaxial T1WI three months later, following successful treatment of the cellulitis, shows that the left inguinal node has reduced in size (now measuring 1.1 cm in short axis) (arrowhead). This node remained stable on a further two-year follow-up, and this is consistent with it having been a reactive node.
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Figure 13.21 Tumor recurrence in the left groin following bilateral groin dissections. (A, B) Transaxial T2WI showing irregular low signal within both groins (arrows in A), anterior to the femoral vessels, in keeping with previous bilateral groin dissection. On the left, there is a lobulated intermediate signal intensity mass (asterisk) anterior to the area of fibrosis, consistent with inguinal tumor recurrence. At the more superior level in B, there is an enlarged left external iliac node (arrowheads); this has a rounded shape and an irregular margin and shows intermediate signal intensity, with a small area of central fluid signal (crossed arrow), representing necrosis. This appearance is consistent with a metastastic node.
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Figure 13.22 Tumor recurrence in penile stump following partial penectomy, with further infiltrating tumor recurrence following salvage surgery. (A) Sagittal, (B) coronal, and (C) transaxial T2WI through the penile stump. There is intermediate signal tumor (T) expanding the corpora cavernosa of the penile stump, containing some cystic areas (curved arrows). The tumor does not extend into the penile crura (Cr in C). In A and B, tumor is seen extending superiorly beyond the corpora cavernosa (arrowheads) and proximally along the surface of the corpora cavernosa to within a few millimeters of the symphysis pubis (arrow in A). The corpus spongiosum (S) and urethra (crossed arrow) are not involved. (D, E) Transaxial T2WI in the same patient following salvage surgery with total penectomy and bilateral groin dissection. There is linear low signal intensity in both groins (arrowheads) with a small inguinal fluid collection on the left (F), consistent with recent surgery. High signal intensity is seen within the prepubic subcutaneous fat and the obturator internus muscles due to edema (open arrows). There is tumor recurrence within the ischioanal fat on the right, just medial to the obturator internus muscle (T in D), this tracks posteriorly along the course of the perineal nerve and through the pudendal canal into the gluteal region (T in E). A further tumor deposit is seen involving the tip of the left seminal vesicle (arrow), extending posteriorly along the perirectal fascia (crossed arrow). There is a slightly enlarged, rounded right external iliac lymph node (asterisk) which is also suspicious of a metastasis. (Continued)
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Figure 13.22 (Continued )
Figure 13.23 Tumor recurrence in penile stump following partial penectomy, causing urethral dilatation. (A) Sagittal, (B) coronal, and (C) transaxial T2WI through the penile stump. There is heterogeneous intermediate signal tumor (T) inferiorly within the penile stump, infiltrating the corpus spongiosum. The urethra is obstructed and markedly dilated (arrowheads). The tumor extends superiorly from the corpus spongiosum through the fascia into the inferior corpora cavernosa (arrows in A and B).
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Figure 13.23 (Continued )
Figure 13.24 Tumor recurrence in penile crus following subtotal penectomy. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI through the root of the penis. There has been a subtotal penectomy with urethral diversion to the perineum (arrow in A). There is heterogeneous intermediate signal tumor recurrence (T) expanding the right corpus cavernosum and anterior crus.
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FURTHER READING Kayes O, Minhas S, Allen C, et al. The role of magnetic resonance imaging in the local staging of penile cancer. Eur Urol 2007; 51:1313–1319. This study demonstrates that penile MRI is highly accurate in the local staging of penile cancer. Kochhar R, Taylor B, Sangar V. Imaging in primary penile cancer: current status and future directions. Eur Radiol 2010; 20:36–47. Comprehensive review of the current role of imaging in penile carcinoma with a systematic approach to make the best use of imaging in the management of patients with penile cancer. Petralia G, Villa G, Scardino E, et al. Local staging of penile cancer using magnetic resonance imaging with pharmacologically induced penile erection. Radiol Med (Torino) 2008; 113:517–528. This study compares the local staging of penile cancer by MR combined with pharmacologically
induced penile erection (PIPE) with clinical examination and pathology to verify whether MRI-PIPE led to changes in treatment planning. Scardino E, Villa G, Bonomo G, et al. Magnetic resonance imaging combined with artificial erection for local staging of penile cancer. Urology 2004; 63:1158–1162. The first study to use artificial erection using prostaglandin E1 with MRI to stage local penile cancer. Singh AK, Saokar A, Hahn PF, et al. Imaging of penile neoplasms. Radiographics 2005; 25:1629–1638. Excellent illustrated review. Solsona E, Algaba F, Horenblas S, et al. EUR guidelines on penile cancer. Eur Urol 2004; 46:1–8. Standard European guidelines for diagnosis and management of penile cancers. Vossough A, Pretorius ES, Siegelman ES, et al. Magnetic resonance imaging of the penis. Abdom Imaging 2002; 27:640–659. Nice examples of MR imaging of penile disorders.
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14 Pelvic metastases Fenella Wong
INTRODUCTION Pelvic metastatic disease may be lymphatic, osseous, or visceral. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) offers the most accurate cross-sectional assessment of potential metastatic sites in the pelvis.
LYMPH NODE METASTASES Since lymphatic tumor spread is common in pelvic malignancy, it is important to identify the anatomical location of all the pelvic nodal groups and to be aware of the usual pathway of lymphatic drainage for each organ involved. The location of nodal metastases affects the overall staging. Involvement of regional lymph nodes is denoted by the N stage in the TNM staging system, whereas involvement of distant nodes is denoted by the M stage.
Normal Lymph Node Sites There are perivisceral nodes in the mesorectal fat, parametrium, and paravesical fat. While mesorectal lymph node metastases are often identified in rectal cancer, the other perivisceral nodes are only rarely seen. Nodal metastases are most frequently identified in the pelvic sidewall chains, which are the external iliac, internal iliac, and common iliac nodal groups, each named after the artery it accompanies. l
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External iliac lymph nodes are composed of medial, middle, and lateral nodes. The medial chain lies just posterior to the external iliac vein and medial to the obturator internus. This chain is also known as the “surgical obturator” group, since it is adjacent to the obturator vessels. Some authorities consider this group to be part of the internal iliac chain. The middle chain lies between the external iliac artery and vein. The lateral chain is lateral to the external iliac artery. The external iliac lymph nodes drain to the middle and lateral common iliac chains. Internal iliac lymph nodes accompany the internal iliac vessels and drain to the common iliac chain. This group also includes two outlying nodal sites, the sacral nodes and the “anatomical obturator” nodes. The former accompany the median and lateral sacral vessels and may drain directly into the lumbar lymphatics. The latter lie in the obturator foramen but are identified in less than 10% of the population. Common iliac lymph nodes are composed of medial, middle, and lateral nodes. The medial chain lies between both common iliac arteries and includes nodes anterior to the sacral promontory. The lateral chain lies lateral to the common iliac artery. The middle (posterior) chain lies posterior to the common iliac vessels, between the psoas muscle and the spine. Enlargement of nodes in this chain
produces the filled in fat sign at the pelvic brim. The common iliac lymph nodes drain to the left and right lateral aortic chains, which are part of the lumbar (upper retroperitoneal) nodal chain. The other local nodal group of relevance in pelvic cancer is the inguinal chain composed of superficial and deep subgroups. The superficial inguinal nodes lie immediately below the inguinal ligament and drain to the external iliac chain. The deep inguinal nodes lie medial to the femoral vein and also drain to the external iliac chain. The usual pathways of lymphatic drainage for each of the pelvic organs are listed in Table 14.1. However, certain tumor types may skip nodal stations, giving rise to noncontiguous nodal spread. For example, in cervical carcinoma the pelvic nodes may appear normal on imaging, but retroperitoneal and supraclavicular lymph node enlargement may be identified. Also, surgery can radically alter lymphatic drainage, which is relevant in the assessment of nodal metastases in recurrent disease.
Prognostic Significance of Lymph Node Metastases Pelvic metastatic lymph node involvement alters tumor staging, treatment options, and prognosis. For example, the presence of nodal disease in bladder cancer means that the patient is ineligible for surgery and requires chemotherapy or combined chemoradiotherapy. In addition, the presence of nodal metastases significantly affects the prognosis. The five-year survival for T1N1 bladder tumors is 15% but increases to 85% for T1N0 tumors.
Accuracy of Imaging in the Detection of Lymph Node Metastases Ultrasound, CT, and MRI rely on morphological features, such as lymph node size, to suggest the presence of lymph node metastases. Ultrasound is of little value in lymph node staging of pelvic malignancy as it has a relatively poor sensitivity for the detection of retroperitoneal and pelvic nodes. Assessing the relative accuracy of CT and MRI is difficult despite the numerous published studies because they vary in the criteria adopted for malignant infiltration and in the imaging technique employed. Overall, the range of accuracies quoted for detection of lymph node metastases with MRI and CT are 85% to93% and 65% to 80%, respectively. The sensitivities of MRI and CT range from 50% to 73% and 44% to 86%, respectively, with specificities of 83% to 98% and 78% to 97%, respectively. CT and MRI are therefore equivalent in the detection of lymph node metastases. 18-Fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET) is a functional imaging modality relying on increased glucose metabolism in cancer cells. In the detection of lymph node metastases, FDG PET sensitivities range from
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Table 14.1 Normal Sites of Lymphatic Drainage for the Pelvic Organs Organ
Lymph drainage
Ovary
(1) Para-aortic via lymphatic chain accompanying the ovarian vessels, on the left to the renal vein and on the right to the inferior vena cava at L1 level. (2) External and common iliac, obturator via the broad ligament (3) Superficial inguinal via round ligament
Uterus
(1) Fundus—Para-aortic via lymph chain accompanying the ovarian vessels (2) Body—External and internal iliac to common iliac (3) Region of fallopian tube—Superficial inguinal via round ligament
Cervix
(1) Parametrial, surgical obturator and presacral (via the uterosacral ligament) initially (2) External iliac, internal iliac to common iliac
Vagina
(1) Upper 1/3—Internal and external iliac accompanying uterine artery (2) Middle 1/3—Internal iliac accompanying vaginal artery (3) Lower 1/3—Superficial inguinal
Prostate
(1) Surgical obturator most frequently (2) Internal and external iliac to common iliac (3) Presacral
Bladder
(1) Anterior/lateral paravesical and presacral initially, followed by (2) Surgical obturator and external iliac to common iliac
Rectal
(1) Pararectal/ mesorectal initially (2) Upper ½—Pararectal at origin of inferior mesenteric artery via the lymph chain accompanying the superior rectal artery (3) Lower ½—Internal iliac via lymph chain accompanying the middle rectal artery
Anus
(1) Above dentate line—Perirectal, internal iliac (2) Below dentate line—Superficial inguinal
Penis
(1) Inguinal nodes initially (2) Skin and prepuce—Superficial inguinal (3) Glans penis—Deep inguinal, external iliac (4) Erectile tissue and penile urethra—Internal iliac nodes May be bilateral nodes with unilateral tumor due to communication between lymphatic vessels
10% to 100% and specificities from 55.5% to 100%. While many studies demonstrate increased staging accuracy of FDG PET compared to cross-sectional imaging, its availability is limited and CT and MRI remain the primary imaging modalities in lymph node assessment.
MRI Technique for Lymph Node Assessment The body coil is used to obtain images of the upper retroperitoneal nodal stations and a pelvic phased-array coil should be used to assess the pelvic lymph node stations. Intravenous hyoscine-n-butylbromide (Buscopan1) may be given to reduce artifacts caused by bowel peristalsis and improve image quality. T1-weighted (T1W) sequences enable identification of lymph nodes against the high signal intensity of the pelvic fat. T2-weighted (T2W) sequences allow the signal intensity characteristics of the nodes to be compared with those of the primary tumor. A fat-suppressed sequence may make pelvic lymph nodes more conspicuous. The use of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) in the assessment of pelvic nodal metastases is still being evaluated. There is early evidence that DWI increases the conspicuity of lymph nodes, though there is no firm data currently available in the peer-reviewed literature regarding its efficacy in the differentiation between benign and metastatic nodes. The use of ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) contrast agents in lymph node assessment showed some early encouraging results. Despite this, they have been withdrawn from use as studies failed to confirm a sufficient
efficacy. Intravenous MRI contrast agents are not routinely indicated.
Normal Lymph Node Appearances Normal pelvic lymph nodes may appear homogenous or have a central fatty hilum. They are best detected on T1-weighted images (T1WI), where they appear of homogenous low/intermediate signal contrasting well with the surrounding highsignal fat, or have a high-signal hilum consistent with intranodal fat, surrounded by an intermediate signal rim giving a characteristic target appearance. On T2-weighted images (T2WI), lymph nodes may be less conspicuous due to reduced contrast between their intermediate/high signal and the high signal of the surrounding fat. On a fat-suppressed short tau inversion recovery (STIR) sequence, lymph nodes tend to be well seen as high signal structures. The STIR sequence is particularly helpful for differentiating between hilar fat and central nodal necrosis.
Imaging Features of Lymph Node Metastases When differentiating benign from metastatic lymph nodes on CT and MRI, nodal size is the only imaging criterion widely accepted to be useful. However, size alone is often inaccurate as small lymph nodes may harbor micrometastases and, conversely, large nodes may be enlarged due to inflammation or reactive hyperplasia rather than metastatic involvement. There are other helpful imaging features including shape, site,
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clustering and asymmetry, contour, and signal intensity, which should also be considered when deciding if a lymph node is involved by metastatic disease. l
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Size: When assessing lymph node size, it is important to measure the maximum short axis diameter (MSAD), since that remains relatively constant irrespective of nodal orientation in the plane of the scan. Moreover, lymph nodes involved by tumor are known to expand by becoming rounder before they become longer. Currently, there is no universally agreed normal pelvic lymph node size in the imaging literature and the range varies between 6 and 15 mm with the most frequently used upper limit of normal short axis diameter being 10 mm. This is because studies have been performed on a mix of patient groups, such as normal controls or patients with early stage cancers who were eligible for surgical correlation. In these groups, normal lymph nodes often have a small short axis diameter (5 mm or less). However, in later stage larger tumors, which are often necrotic and infected, the regional lymph nodes are more likely to undergo reactive hyperplasia, and there may be a need for a higher size threshold. If a lower size threshold is used, then the sensitivity of detecting metastatic nodes increases, but the specificity decreases. Conversely, a higher size threshold reduces sensitivity but increases specificity for detection of metastatic involvement. Shape: Normal lymph nodes are kidney bean shaped or oval. Round nodes should be regarded with suspicion. Site: The normal lymph drainage pathway of the pelvic organs should be considered when assessing a lymph node for metastatic involvement. If a node is detected in a recognized drainage site, although borderline on size criteria, it should be considered with caution. For example, the presence of a prominent obturator node in a patient with bladder, prostate, or cervical cancer should be considered suspicious for disease involvement. Clustering, asymmetry, and contour: Asymmetry of normal lymph nodes can be seen in up to 10% of patients and therefore this feature cannot be solely relied upon. However, clustering of numerous small nodes is a suspicious finding. In the absence of local acute inflammation, a node with irregular margins suggests extracapsular spread of tumor. In such cases, over 75% of nodes are already enlarged and will have been considered abnormal on size criteria. Signal intensity: If the nodal tissue is of similar signal to the primary tumor on T2WI then one should be suspicious of metastatic involvement. Likewise, central nodal necrosis is a good predictor of metastases in patients with squamous cell carcinoma or teratoma. This appears as central high signal on T2WI and low signal on T1WI but is best appreciated on contrast-enhanced T1WI, when the nonenhancing necrotic center of the node contrasts well against the enhancing periphery.
Potential Diagnostic Pitfalls of MRI l
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vessels, ureters, and prominent iliopsoas bursae. A helpful landmark in identification of the ovary is the round ligament. This extends from the groin into the pelvis, passing medial to the external iliac vessels, and links to the ipsilateral adnexa. The ovarian follicles may be clearly visible on T2W scans in premenopausal women. Bowel, tortuous blood vessels, vessels with slow flow, and ureters may be differentiated from lymph nodes by scrolling through the images to confirm they are tubular structures. In addition, fast flowing blood produces a flow void particularly in arteries. The ureter may have high-signal urine within the lumen on T2W images. An enlarged iliopsoas bursa is low signal on T1WI and high signal on T2WI, smoothly demarcated and characteristically positioned posterolateral to the iliofemoral vessels. Postsurgical complications such as hematomas or lymphoceles may mimic enlarged lymph nodes. Hematomas may demonstrate the concentric ring sign on T1WI. Lymphoceles form in less than 5% of patients postoperatively. They are collections of lymph fluid, which typically lie adjacent to the pelvic sidewall and are invested by parietal peritoneum. They return low signal on T1WI and high signal on T2WI. Nodular Peritoneal metastases may simulate nodal metastases, particularly adjacent to the pelvic sidewall. They lie in the peritoneal fat or on the peritoneal surfaces, thus continuity with the pelvic peritoneum, if visualized, will help to differentiate from nodal metastases.
BONE METASTASES Malignant bone infiltration occurs due to direct tumor invasion or from hematogenous spread. Direct invasion may be due to erosion by the primary tumor, such as involvement of the sacrum by rectal cancer, or due to extracapsular lymph node infiltration, as in cervical cancer. Bone metastases from hematogenous spread can occur with any pelvic tumor, most commonly in prostate cancer and rarely in ovarian cancer.
Accuracy and Use of MR in Detection of Bone Metastases Whole-body MRI is known to be superior to bone scintigraphy in the detection of bone metastases, with a sensitivity of 82% to 91% compared with 71% to 84%. This is due to the alteration of signal on MRI at sites of early marrow involvement before osteoblastic stimulation (the cause of radionuclide avidity) occurs. Similarly, MRI is superior to CT due to the early detection of bone marrow involvement. Early studies have also shown that whole-body MRI is superior to PET-CT with a better sensitivity and overall accuracy of 91% in comparison to 78%. During a routine pelvic staging MRI examination, the pelvis, proximal femora, and lumbar spine are imaged.
MRI Technique for Assessment of Bone Metastases T1W and fat suppressing STIR sequences are the most useful sequences for identifying lesions. T2*-weighted gradient echo images, though less sensitive than T1WI and STIR sequences, may show lesions by their loss of susceptibility artifact, due to disruption of the trabeculae, and may help identify fractures and osteoblastic healing in osteoporosis. T2W spin echo sequences are of limited use. Intravenous contrast may be helpful as the metastatic tumor will enhance, though this is not routinely used.
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In the specific case of suspected vertebral metastases, the whole spine should be imaged to detect all metastatic deposits present. Parasagittal sections should be performed with axial sections through areas of concern. In addition to the conventional MR sequences noted above, DW sequences have also been found to be of limited use in differentiating malignant vertebral collapse from acute benign vertebral fractures. T2W spin echo sequences will help to evaluate concomitant degenerative disc disease.
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Imaging Features Normal Marrow Appearances Normal bone marrow may be hemopoietically active, containing myeloid elements known as “red marrow,” or hemopoietically inactive containing mainly fat cells known as “yellow marrow.” At birth, virtually the whole skeleton contains red marrow. During normal ageing, this is converted to yellow marrow in a uniformly predictable manner, starting from the extremities and moving proximally. In adults, the only remaining red marrow is in the axial skeleton and most proximal appendicular skeleton. There is a mix of red and yellow marrow in some portions of the skeleton, notably the pelvic bones. Red and yellow marrow have different imaging characteristics. Because of its fat content, yellow marrow tends to be relatively high signal on T1W and T2W images and to suppress on STIR sequences resulting in low signal. Red marrow is intermediate signal on T1WI and higher signal on T2WI and STIR sequences. When there is a mix of red and yellow marrow, the overall result is to increase the signal intensity of the marrow on T1WI so that the islands of red marrow are often poorly demarcated intermediate signal areas within the marrow. On DWI normal marrow shows very low ADC values but there is variation in appearances on high B value diffusion images depending on the proportions of red and yellow marrow. Often the marrow demonstrates low-signal on high B value imaging. Bone Metastases Metastases are discrete intermediate to low-signal lesions contrasting well with the predominantly higher signal fatty marrow on T1WI. On STIR sequences, metastases are usually of high signal intensity. In prostate cancer, sclerotic metastases appear as low signal intensity on both T1W and STIR sequences. On DWI lytic metastases may be of high signal because they demonstrate restricted diffusion; however this is less than that of the surrounding normal marrow, therefore the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values may be higher than the surrounding normal marrow. Complete osteoblastic metastases are not well seen on DWI. The spine is the most common site of bone metastases. In the case of vertebral collapse, there are several features which are more specific to malignant disease. Usually, the whole of the vertebral body is replaced resulting in diffuse homogeneous low signal intensity on T1WI. Rarely marrow replacement is incomplete resulting in residual islands of normal marrow signal. The abnormal vertebra tends to enhance avidly, following intravenous Gd-DTPA though this may be diffuse or patchy. The whole posterior cortex of the involved vertebra may bulge into the spinal canal and the pedicles may be involved. In addition, there may be an associated epidural/ paraspinal soft tissue mass. These features are all suggestive of, though not entirely specific for, malignant involvement.
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Normal conversion of red to yellow marrow, which partially affects a particular bone, can be a problem, particularly in the femoral head and ilium where patchy signal may be detected. This is often relatively symmetrical within the skeleton, and the red marrow appears band like or illdefined enabling differentiation from bone metastases. Bone marrow reconversion of yellow to red marrow may occur in times of increased demand for hemopoiesis, for example in chronic anemic states, and as a result of hemopoietic growth factor therapy. Reconversion starts centrally and spreads more peripherally. It is relatively symmetrical and the marrow demonstrates intermediate signal on T1WI and variable signal on T2W and STIR. While diffuse malignant infiltration from lymphoma, myeloma, or leukemia can be confused with bone marrow reconversion, the pattern is dissimilar to solid tumor bone metastases. Radiotherapy effects result in fatty change within the marrow which is of high signal on T1W and T2W images with suppression of marrow signal on STIR sequences. It is uniform with a sharp demarcation corresponding to the radiotherapy field. Insufficiency fractures occur in bone weakened by radiation osteitis. They are most common in the sacrum but can also occur in the iliac bones adjacent to the sacroiliac joints and the pubic rami. They manifest as bands of low signal on T1WI, high signal on STIR images with a central fine lowsignal intensity fracture line. When the sacrum is affected, bilateral vertical sacral fractures may occur with a bridging horizontal fracture. This correlates with the classical H pattern or “Honda” sign seen on bone scintigraphy. Radiation may cause peritrabecular fibrosis and inflammatory infiltration in bone marrow adjacent to the sacroiliac joints. This results in ill-defined low signal on T1WI and high signal on T2WI. Osteoporotic vertebral collapse occurs in one-third of cancer patients. Acute fractures result in abnormal vertebral signal due to hemorrhage and edema, enhancement, and perivertebral hemorrhage into the soft tissues, which may mimic metastases. Features which favor benign vertebral collapse include (i) a band of low signal adjacent to the end plate on T1WI, (ii) the vertebra being isointense to adjacent normal vertebrae, sometimes with a low signal fracture line seen on T2WI, (iii) partial or complete vertebral enhancement similar to that of adjacent normal vertebrae, (iv) a focal or linear hyperintensity adjacent to the vertebral end plate on STIR images, known as the “fluid sign.” This represents osteonecrosis secondary to fracture of the vertebral end plate. (v) An intravertebral vacuum cleft that is of low signal on T1WI and either hyper- or hypointense on T2WI due to variable fluid content, and (vi) a fragment retropulsed posterosuperiorly into the spinal canal. Chronic vertebral collapse can be distinguished from metastases by the relatively normal signal of the collapsed vertebra on conventional MRI, lack of an associated perivertebral soft tissue mass, and lack of enhancement. Hemangiomas are focal lesions with signal varying from intermediate to high on T1W, T2W, and STIR images, depending on the relative proportions of fat, soft tissue vascular components and interstitial edema. Accentuated
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vertical trabeculation may be seen within larger lesions. These are most commonly seen in the vertebrae, particularly the lower thoracic and upper lumbar spine and are rarely seen in the flat and long bones. Benign bone islands are small intramedullary foci of signal void on all sequences. Their small size and lack of cortical involvement or periosteal reaction may help differentiate them from sclerotic metastases. Subchondral cysts in degenerative joint disease are of low signal on T1WI and high signal on T2W and STIR images. Their typical subchondral location and associated features of loss of joint space, osteophyte formation and low signal subchondral sclerosis help in their diagnosis. Nutrient foramina may be seen in all bones extending from the cortical margin into the medulla. They are small, low signal, well-defined lesions which appear linear when scrolling through the images. They are bilateral, virtually symmetrical, and found in typical anatomical locations, for example, the medial aspect of the ilium. Paget’s disease occurs most commonly in middle age males. It may be solitary or multifocal, thereby simulating metastases. MRI features are nonspecific. The affected bone may appear enlarged, and of heterogenous signal with low-signal cortical thickening. The cortex may occasionally be of higher signal due to remodeling of the cortical bone. Correlation should be made with plain radiographs, which have much more characteristic and specific appearances. Vertebral osteomyelitis with discitis is relatively uncommon, although the incidence is on the rise. Infection starts as osteomyelitis of the end plate and progresses to discitis. Imaging findings include early, nonspecific, subtle end plate edema, of high signal on STIR sequences and low signal on T1W sequences. The abnormality progresses to involve the adjacent intervertebral disc and vertebral body. The involved vertebral bodies are of low signal on T1WI and high signal on T2W and STIR images with ill-defined vertebral end plates and show enhancement after intravenous contrast medium. The infected disc is of fluid signal and enhances, either homogenously, patchily or rim enhances. There may also be epidural or paravertebral extension with abscess formation, also showing rim enhancement.
appropriate. The commonest organ to harbor metastases is the ovary. Of all ovarian malignancies, 5% to 20% are metastases, occurring either by direct, hematogenous or peritoneal spread. Krukenberg tumors are bilateral ovarian metastases from a gastrointestinal tract tumor, most commonly gastric cancer. They occur in 2% of the female population with gastric carcinoma and may precede diagnosis of the primary tumor in up to 20% of patients. On MRI, the only described imaging feature differentiating between Krukenberg and primary ovarian tumors is that primary tumors are more frequently multilocular. Breast carcinoma can metastasize to any organ. The lobular subtype is prone to spread to unusual sites including the gastrointestinal tract, peritoneum, and adnexae, which are affected in up to 20% of patients. At autopsy 50% of patients with breast cancer will have ovarian metastases. Uterine metastases also occur in breast cancer. In our experience, metastases to the uterus from breast cancer have produced an enlarged uterus with the myometrium demonstrating low signal intensity on T2WI, similar to diffuse adenomyosis. Malignant melanoma may also metastasize to the pelvic viscera or subcutaneous soft tissues. Typically, lesions are of intermediate or high signal on T1WI. The high signal is due to the paramagnetic affect of intralesional melanin. Lesions may be of mixed high and intermediate signal on T2WI. Large lesions may undergo central necrosis.
SOFT TISSUE METASTASES Metastases to soft tissues such as skeletal muscle and subcutaneous tissues are rare, seen in 0.75% to 9% of autopsies performed on patients with metastatic cancer. The most commonly reported primary malignancies known to metastasize to soft tissues are melanoma, lung, kidney, and colonic carcinomas. Soft tissue metastases have nonspecific appearances on MR, though usually enhance post intravenous contrast injection.
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METASTASES TO PELVIC VISCERA Rarely, extrapelvic tumors may metastasize to the pelvic viscera and diagnosis depends on a known history of extrapelvic primary malignancy with biopsy of the pelvic mass where
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Posttreatment fibrotic scar tissue appears as low signal on both T1W and T2W images and shows minimal, if any, enhancement. This appearance overlaps those of desmoplastic tumors. Subcutaneous injection sites appear as round soft tissue nodules in the subcutaneous fat, thus may mimic subcutaneous metastases. Their typical location in the anterior abdominal wall or buttocks, plus clinical correlation, will help to differentiate them from metastases.
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Figure 14.1 Normal lymph nodes. (A) Transaxial T2WI showing two lymph nodes in the right lateral external iliac (straight arrows) and surgical obturator regions (curved arrows), both with a high signal intensity fatty central hilum and an intermediate signal intensity margin. The patient has a large bladder tumor (T) extending to involve the cervix (C). An incidental bone cyst (asterisk) is present in the left acetabulum. (B) Transaxial T1WI showing a non enlarged lymph node in the left superficial inguinal region (straight arrow). This has an intermediate signal intensity center with a rim of fatty high signal and an intermediate signal intensity margin, which gives it a typical “target” appearance. Nodes with this appearance are less likely to be infiltrated with tumor. Note a small right superficial inguinal lymph node (arrowhead) of more uniform intermediate to high soft tissue signal intensity. Abbreviations: A, external iliac artery; V, external iliac vein; OI, obturator internus muscle.
Figure 14.2 Normal lymph node appearances on STIR sequences. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) STIR images demonstrating small bilateral inguinal lymph nodes (arrows) which demonstrate high signal on STIR. Note the bilateral low-signal nodules lying posterior to the external iliac vessels (open arrows in A). Although similar in appearance to lymph nodes on A, their signal is suppressed on B. They are not in a typical location of lymph nodes and are thought likely to represent iliopsoas bursae with no internal fluid. (C) Transaxial T2WI and (D) STIR images in a different patient demonstrating a right inguinal lymph node (arrows) which is predominantly of high signal intensity but with some internal structure as shown by chemical shift artifact within the node in C (arrowhead). On the STIR image, the capsule of the node increases in signal, the fat within the node suppresses and the soft tissue structure becomes evident as small foci of high signal. Abbreviation: STIR, short tau inversion recovery.
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Figure 14.2 (Continued )
Figure 14.3 Malignant schwanoma with right internal iliac lymph node. Transaxial T2WI showing an enlarged right internal iliac lymph node (arrow) which is the same heterogenous signal as the primary malignant schwanoma (T). Abbreviation: B, bladder.
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Figure 14.4 Paracervical metastatic lymph node in cervical cancer. Transaxial T2WI of the cervix. There are two paracervical lymph nodes (arrows), which should not normally be visualized. They are of similar signal intensity to the cervical primary tumor (T). Abbreviations: B, bladder; R, rectum.
Figure 14.5 Presacral lymph nodes in anal carcinoma. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) sagittal T2WI demonstrating multiple presacral lymph nodes (arrows). Presacral nodes are not normally seen therefore their presence, however small, raises the suspicion of metastatic lymph node disease. Abbreviation: S, sacrum.
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Figure 14.6 Prostatic carcinoma with anatomical and surgical obturator lymph nodes. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T2WI demonstrating a prostate tumor (T) with extracapsular spread (short arrow). There is a right-sided anatomical obturator lymph node (curved arrows in A), which is of similar signal to the primary prostatic tumor (T). There are bilateral enlarged right surgical obturator nodes (long arrows in B) which have a high-signal center, greater than fat, indicating central necrosis. Abbreviations: O, obturator internus muscle; OE, obturator externus muscle; P, pectineus muscle.
Figure 14.7 Common iliac lymph nodes—“filled in fat” sign. Transaxial T1WI through the proximal common iliac vessels demonstrates enlarged middle/posterior common iliac lymph nodes (arrows) situated behind the iliac vessels filling in the fat and eroding into the sacrum. Compare with the normal left side where fat is seen between the psoas muscle and bone. Iliac vessels (asterisk). Abbreviation: P, psoas muscle.
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Figure 14.9 Alteration in pattern of lymph node metastases after surgery for bladder cancer. Transaxial T2WI showing an enlarged right superficial inguinal lymph node (straight arrow), which is of the same signal as the pelvic recurrence of the patient’s bladder tumor (T). The usual pattern of lymph node spread from bladder carcinoma is to the paravesical, obturator, and external iliac nodes.
Figure 14.8 Metastatic upper retroperitoneal lymph nodes. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T1WI showing an enlarged left upper para-aortic lymph node (arrow). Abbreviations: AO, aorta; B, bladder; K, kidney; V, inferior vena cava.
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Figure 14.11 Metastatic lymph nodes—extracapsular extension of tumor. Transaxial T2WI showing an enlarged right obturator lymph node (straight arrow), which has an irregular wall indicating likely extracapsular spread. The signal intensity is also abnormal and similar to that of the primary tumor (T) involving the uterus. A small but asymmetrically prominent right internal iliac lymph node (arrowhead) is also noted.
Figure 14.10 Metastatic lymph nodes which are nonenlarged but in the recognized drainage pathway of the primary tumor. (A) Transaxial T2WI in a patient with cervical cancer demonstrating a nonenlarged left internal iliac lymph node (straight arrow). This is of similar signal intensity to the primary cervical tumor (T) and is highly suspicious for metastatic involvement. (B) Coronal T2WI in a patient with prostate cancer with nonenlarged lymph nodes in the proximal left external iliac (straight arrow) and both obturator regions (curved arrows). Again, these are of similar signal to the primary prostatic tumor (T). Bladder catheter (asterisk). In both of these patients, lymph nodes are located in the known drainage pathway of the primary tumor and their signal intensity mirrors the signal intensity of the primary increasing the likelihood of metastatic involvement despite their small size.
Figure 14.12 Metastatic lymph node—tumor signal. Coronal T2WI demonstrating an enlarged right obturator node (straight arrows), which has an abnormal signal intensity similar to that of the primary bladder tumor (T). Note right hydroureter secondary to obstruction by the bladder tumor (U). Abbreviation: C, common iliac artery and vein.
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Figure 14.13 Perirectal and right external iliac nodal metastases with central nodal necrosis. Transaxial T2WI in a patient with a squamous cell tumor (T) of the cervix showing an enlarged abnormal perirectal lymph node (straight arrow). It is of similar signal intensity to the cervical tumor. There is also an enlarged right internal iliac lymph node (curved arrow). It has an irregular medial contour indicating extracapsular tumor spread. There is a high signal central area in keeping with central nodal necrosis, though a preserved central fatty hilum may also have a similar appearance. These can be differentiated using STIR or fat-suppressed images. The finding of central nodal necrosis is consistent with metastatic disease in patients with squamous cell carcinoma, irrespective of the size of the lymph node. Abbreviation: STIR, short tau inversion recovery.
Figure 14.14 Lymph node pitfall—reactive lymph node hyperplasia. (A, B) Transaxial T2WI demonstrating enlarged left obturator in (A) and external iliac lymph nodes in B (straight arrows) due to infection resulting from a bladder tumor perforation with abscess formation (A). The primary tumor (T) is of different signal intensity to the hyperplastic lymph nodes. There is bilateral hydroureter (asterisks in A). Abbreviation: B, bladder.
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Figure 14.15 Lymph node pitfall—retained normal ovary. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) T2WI showing a normal right ovary (straight arrow) containing follicles of high signal on the T2WI. The round ligament is identified (curved arrows) as it extends toward the ovary.
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Figure 14.16 Lymph node pitfall—iliopsoas bursa. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) T2WI demonstrate a well-defined iliopsoas bursa on the left (straight arrow). The signal intensity characteristics of the bursa are in keeping with fluid content and it has a typical location posterolateral to the distal external iliac vessels. There is a beak of tissue extending from the bursa (curved arrow) toward the left hip joint, which represents the bursa’s communication with the hip joint. Abbreviations: A, external iliac artery; V, external iliac vein.
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Figure 14.18 Lymph node pitfall—left pelvic sidewall lymphocele. Coronal T2WI showing a well-defined, round lymphocele on the left pelvic sidewall (long arrow). This is of homogeneous low signal on T1WI and homogeneous high signal on T2WI, demonstrating its fluid content. Note the adjacent bloom artifact from a surgical clip (short arrows). Also note adjacent linear, low signal, post surgical fibrosis (curved arrows). The patient has had a previous radical prostatectomy for prostatic carcinoma.
Figure 14.17 Lymph node pitfall—postsurgical hematoma. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) T2WI demonstrating a right pelvic hematoma (straight arrow) abutting a fluid collection (asterisk). On T1WI, this is of central intermediate signal due to the presence of deoxyhemoglobin (D) with a high-signal rim due to extracellular methemoglobin (M), which shortens the T1. The most peripheral rim is of very low signal due to the presence of hemosiderin (H). In B, the hematoma center is of more uniform high signal intensity with improved visualization of the hemosiderin ring.
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Figure 14.20 Normal bone marrow—transition zone between red and yellow marrow. Coronal T1WI showing hemopoietic red marrow in the axial skeleton, which is intermediate signal on T1WI (straight arrows). The zone of transition to fatty yellow marrow in the proximal appendicular skeleton shows the characteristic high-signal yellow marrow (curved arrows) with islands of poorly demarcated intermediate signal red marrow (open arrows). Comparing left to right, this is a fairly symmetrical process and is easily differentiated from bone metastases, which would be well defined and asymmetrical. Note bilateral nutrient foramina (arrowheads).
Figure 14.19 Lymph node pitfall—arachnoid cysts. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) sagittal T2WI demonstrating arachnoid cysts extending from the sacral foramina to the presacral region (straight arrows). They are of homogenous high signal on T2WI and low signal on T1WI. Note further arachnoid cysts within the sacral foramina in A (curved arrow). The patient has had a penectomy and groin dissection for penile cancer. Abbreviations: B, bladder; S, sacrum.
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Figure 14.21 Bone metastases from prostatic carcinoma with posttreatment radiotherapy change seen within the pelvis. Coronal T1WI through the lumbar spine and pelvis. There are multiple well-defined areas of low signal seen within the lumbar vertebrae (straight arrows), which represent bone metastases from prostatic carcinoma. These contrast well with the intermediate to high signal of the normal adjacent vertebral bone marrow. Homogeneous high signal due to radiation induced fatty marrow replacement is seen in the pelvis and femora (curved arrows).
Figure 14.22 Bone metastasis from rectal cancer. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) T2WI showing a metastasis in the right ischial tuberosity (straight arrow) in a patient with rectal cancer. The lesion appears of low signal compared to the surrounding fatty bone marrow on T1WI and high signal on T2WI due to the higher relative water content of the metastasis in comparison to the normal marrow.
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Figure 14.23 Vertebral metastasis involving the pedicle. (A) Sagittal T1WI, (B) T2WI, and (C) STIR images showing metastasis involving the L2 vertebra pedicle and T10 vertebra body extending into the pedicle (straight arrows). These lesions are of low signal compared to the normal fatty bone marrow in A, subtle increased signal relative to normal bone marrow in B and are of marked high signal in C. There is a further metastasis in the T12 vertebral body (curved arrow). Abbreviation: STIR, short tau inversion recovery.
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Figure 14.24 Sclerotic bone metastases in prostatic carcinoma. (A) Coronal T1WI and (B) T2WI showing sclerotic metastases in the right hemipelvis, which are low signal on T1WI and maintain reduced signal on T2WI (straight arrows). There is a further sclerotic metastasis in the L3 vertebral body (curved arrow in A). Benign bone islands may have similar appearances, but these are smaller, well-defined and very low signal on both sequences. Also note left external iliac lymph node metastases (asterisk). Abbreviations: B, bladder; T, primary tumor.
Figure 14.25 Bone metastases on diffusion-weighted imaging. (A) Sagittal DWI (b = 600 s/mm2) and (B) ADC map demonstrate multiple bone metastases (M) from breast cancer showing restricted diffusion (bright in A). Although the ADC value of the metastases is low, it is not as low as normal bone marrow, therefore in this patient the metastases appear of relative higher ADC compared to adjacent normal marrow (arrow). However, it should be noted that DWI appearances may be unreliable.
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Figure 14.26 Bone metastases pitfall—hyperemic marrow. (A) Coronal T1W and (B) transaxial T2WI demonstrate homogenous intermediate to low signal intensity within the vertebral marrow (straight arrows) in keeping with hematopoeitic transformation of the marrow secondary to anemia. The transformation starts within the axial skeleton and progresses peripherally, but this may be patchy and the femoral heads and greater trochanters (curved arrows) retain normal high-signal fatty yellow marrow. The appearances in the vertebrae may be misinterpreted as metastases, which also result in low signal on T1WI, but solid tumor metastases are usually discrete, asymmetrical lesions. In B, note the heterogenous metastastic tumor mass in the anterior abdominal wall secondary to ovarian carcinoma (T).
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Figure 14.27 Sacral insufficiency fractures post radiotherapy. (A) Transaxial and (B) coronal T1WI showing classical low-signal vertical bands (straight arrows) through both sacral ala with an additional central sacral vertical band (curved arrow in B) and a transverse low signal intensity region at S1-2 level (asterisk in A). There is a large ovarian tumor recurrence (T). Sacral insufficiency fractures are usually vertically orientated through the sacral ala with a horizontal bridging fracture, often through the junction between two sacral vertebrae. The central vertical fracture is unusual and may have occurred because of the pressure effect exerted on the irradiated bone by the large pelvic tumor.
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Figure 14.28 Bone metastasis pitfall—osteoporotic vertebral collapse. (A) Sagittal T1WI and (B) STIR images demonstrate diffuse low signal throughout T10 vertebral body on T1WI, which is high signal on STIR images (straight arrows). (C) Sagittal T1WI and (D) STIR images four months later. There has been progression with collapse of the T10 vertebra, which is now of more normal signal. A fracture through the vertebral body is apparent (arrowheads in C). T9 has sustained a new fracture and collapse with altered signal (curved arrows in C and D). A and B demonstrate the early features of hemorrhage and edema in T10 which is then followed by resolution of the marrow signal intensity abnormality but persistence of the vertebral collapse and visualization of the fracture line, likely due to incomplete healing in C and D. Also note other vertebrae at different stages of vertebral collapse. Abbreviation: STIR, short tau inversion recovery.
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Figure 14.29 Bone metastasis pitfall—benign vertebral collapse. (A) Sagittal T1WI and (B) STIR images show collapse of the L1 vertebral body. There is posterior displacement of a bone fragment into the spinal canal (arrow head). On T1WI there is a lowsignal band adjacent to the superior end plate (long arrow), with normal marrow signal in the rest of the vertebral body (short arrow). In B, there is a linear area of hyperintensity adjacent to the superior vertebral end plate, known as the “fluid sign” (curved arrow). This represents osteonecrosis secondary to fracture of the vertebral end plate. Also note a metastasis in L4 (open arrow), which is of low signal on T1WI compared to surrounding normal marrow and is of increased signal on STIR images. Abbreviation: STIR, short tau inversion recovery.
Figure 14.30 Bone metastasis pitfall—hemangioma. (A) Sagittal T1WI and (B) STIR images demonstrate a well-defined lesion in the L4 vertebral body (arrows), which is of predominantly high signal on the T1WI, though it has a lower signal center, which is of high signal on the STIR image. The signal on T1WI and STIR imaging depends on the relative fat and soft tissue constituents of each lesion. Abbreviation: STIR, short tau inversion recovery.
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Figure 14.32 Bone metastasis pitfall—subchondral cyst in degenerative joint disease. Transaxial T2WI showing a welldefined subchondral cyst in the left acetabulum (straight arrow). This is of high signal on T2WI indicating its fluid content. The associated subchondral sclerosis (curved arrows) and reduction in joint space all indicate degenerative joint disease. Also note the prominent iliopsoas bursa (Bu) on the left.
Figure 14.31 Bone metastasis pitfall—benign bone island. (A) Coronal T1WI and (B) T2WI showing a well-defined, round lesion in the left iliac bone, which is low signal on both T1WI and T2WI (straight arrow). This can usually be differentiated from a nonsclerotic bone metastasis, which would be intermediate signal on T2WI; however, a sclerotic metastasis may be of similar appearance. The lesion did not change over time. Note the pararectal mucinous recurrent tumor (T).
Figure 14.33 Bone metastasis pitfall—normal nutrient foramen. (A) Transaxial T1WI, (B) T2WI, and (C) coronal T1WI showing well–defined, linear or tubular structures (arrows) within both iliac wings. These extend centrally from the cortical surface, are bilaterally symmetrical and occur in this typical location within the ilium. (Continued )
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Figure 14.34 Bone metastasis pitfall—Paget’s disease. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) coronal T2WI demonstrating an expanded right iliac bone and ischial tuberosity with low signal thickened trabeculae (long arrows) and cortical thickening (short arrows). The medulla is of slightly lower signal intensity due to a combination of trabecular thickening and marrow change. The latter is due to increased fibrovascular tissue that replaces yellow marrow in more active disease. In A, note the bone metastasis in the left ischial tuberosity, which is of diffuse low signal (open arrow). Abbreviation: B, bladder. Figure 14.33 (Continued)
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Figure 14.35 Bone metastasis pitfall—vertebral osteomyelitis with discitis. (A) Sagittal T1WI, (B) T2WI, and (C) postgadolinium T1WI through the cervicothoracic spine. In A, there is reduced signal of the T4 and T5 vertebrae (long arrows), with abnormal intermediate signal crossing the intervertebral disc (short arrow). In B, the intervertebral disc is expanded and of increased signal (curved arrow), due to an abscess cavity. In C, there is rim enhancement of the abscess cavity (open arrows).
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Figure 14.36 Bone metastasis pitfall—vertebral osteomyelitis with discitis and vertebral fracture. (A) Sagittal T1WI, (B) STIR image, and (C) postgadolinium T1WI demonstrate a gibbus deformity at the T6 level secondary to fracture and collapse of the T6 vertebra. In A, there is abnormal low signal within the fractured T6 vertebra and crossing the intervertebral discs to involve the adjacent T5 and T7 vertebral bodies (long arrows). There is disruption of the anterior intervertebral discs (arrowheads). T5 and T7 vertebrae are of high signal on STIR images (B) and enhance avidly (open arrows in C) reflecting vertebral osteomyelitis. There is also peripheral enhancement of an intervertebral abscess cavity (curved arrows in C).
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Figure 14.37 Uterine metastases from breast carcinoma. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI showing an enlarged, lowsignal uterus (straight arrows) with foci of high signal metastatic tumor (asterisk) within the myometrium. Note the normal, preserved, high-signal endometrial stripe.
Figure 14.38 Pelvic visceral metastases from malignant melanoma. (A) Sagittal T2WI and (B) postgadolinium T1WI showing a large heterogenous metastatic tumor (T), arising from the left adnexa and lying in the Pouch of Douglas pushing the bladder and uterus forward (straight arrows). After intravenous contrast medium injection, there is enhancement of the mass periphery (curved arrows), but the center does not enhance due to central necrosis. Abbreviations: B, bladder; R, rectum; U, uterus.
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Figure 14.40 Natal cleft metastasis from breast cancer. Transaxial T2WI showing an ill-defined mass (arrow) of reduced signal within the skin and subcutaneous fat of the left natal cleft. Abbreviation: B, bladder.
Figure 14.39 Adnexal metastases from colorectal adenocarcinoma. (A) Transaxial T1WI and (B) T2WI demonstrating a lobulated left adnexal mass. This has locules of generally low signal in A and high-signal in B consistent with fluid (long arrows). There is one locule in the left hemi-pelvis with internal layering of proteinaceous fluid, which is of high signal in A and lower signal in B due to the protein content (short arrows).
Figure 14.41 Metastases to muscle and intermuscular soft tissue. Transaxial (A) T1WI and (B) T2WI demonstrating a mass in the region of the left iliopsoas and vastus intermedius muscles (long arrows) and a mass within the soft tissue between the left pectineus and obturator externus muscles (short arrows). These are of intermediate signal intensity in A and heterogenous mildly increased signal in B. Abbreviations: CC, corpus cavernosum of penis; LT, lesser trochanter of femur.
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SUGGESTED READING Balliu E, Vilanova JC, Pelaez I, et al. Diagnostic value of apparent diffusion coefficients to differentiate benign from malignant vertebral bone marrow lesions. Eur J Radiol 2009; 69:560–566. Study showing that ADC values may be valuable in helping to differentiate acute benign vertebral fractures from malignant or infectious bone lesions. Daldrup-Link HE, Franzius C, Link TM, et al. Whole-body MR imaging for detection of bone metastases in children and young adults. AJR Am J Roentgenol 2001; 177:229–236. Good comparison of MR, skeletal scintigraphy, and PET scanning for the detection of bone metastases. Kim SH, Kim SC, Choi BI, et al. Uterine cervical carcinoma: evaluation of pelvic lymph node metastases with MR imaging. Radiology 190 (3):807–811. Assesses the accuracy of MR in the detection of lymph node metastases and confirms that the short-axis diameter is more accurate than long-axis diameter. Koh D-M, Husband JE. Lymph node metastases. In: Husband Janet ES, Rezneck R, eds. Imaging in Oncology. 3rd ed. 2009:729967–729987. Chapter 40. Good overview of lymph node metastases and a variety of imaging techniques. Koh DM, Hughes M, Husband JE. Cross-sectional imaging of nodal metastases in the abdomen and pelvis. Abdom Imaging 31:632–643. Good review of imaging appearances of metastatic nodes plus pitfalls.
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McMahon CJ, Rofsky NM, Pedrosa I. Lymphatic metastases from pelvic tumours: anatomic classification, characterization and staging. Radiology 2010; 254:31–46. Good review of usual patterns of metastatic spread to lymph nodes plus correct nomenclature. Taoka T, Mayr NA, Lee HJ, et al. Factors influencing visualization of vertebral metastases on MR imaging versus bone scintigraphy. AJR Am J Roentgenol 2001; 176:1525–1530. Demonstrates that cortical involvement is the likely cause of positive findings on bone scans whereas MR scans may detect very early small intramedullary metastases. Uetani M, Hashmi R, Hayashi K. Malignant and benign compression fractures: differentiation and diagnostic pitfalls on MRI. Clin Radiol 2004; 59:124–131. Good comparison of metastatic and benign vertebral compression fractures on MR. Williams AD, Cousins C, Souffer WP, et al. Detection of pelvic lymph node metastases in gynaecological malignancy: a comparison of CT, MR imaging and positron emission tomography. AJR Am J Roentgenol 2001; 177:343–348. Assesses the relative values of CT, MRI, and PET, with histological correlation, in the detection of pelvic lymph node metastases. Wilson D, Allen G. Bone metastases. In: Husband Janet ES, Rezneck R, eds. Imaging in Oncology. 3rd ed. 2009:1005–1020. Chapter 42 Good overview of clinical and imaging features of bone metastases.
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15 MRI of residual and recurrent tumor before pelvic clearance surgery Bernadette M. Carrington
INTRODUCTION Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the most useful imaging modality for assessing patients with primary or treated pelvic cancer. It influences treatment decisions in primary cancer, particularly patient eligibility for surgery and the type of surgery required. In treated cancer, it is used to identify residual or recurrent tumor and to determine the feasibility and extent of salvage surgery. In both primary and recurrent pelvic tumors, pelvic clearance (exenteration) is an important treatment option.
RESIDUAL AND RECURRENT TUMOR Residual tumor is defined as tumor which persists after initial treatment. It is diagnosed clinically by nonregression of the tumor mass and radiologically by a persisting tumor mass, incomplete restoration of organ zonal anatomy or nondevelopment of expected treatment effects. Tumor recurrence is locoregional tumor detected more than six months after initial therapy when there has been a documented treatment response. Recurrence can be detected by physical examination or by rising biochemical tumor markers. It may be diagnosed radiologically by the identification of a new mass, increase in size of an existing mass or new abnormal signal intensity within an organ. Infiltrative recurrence may be difficult to detect and relies on the identification of more subtle changes such as thickening of fascial planes or loss of intraorgan zonal anatomy. When residual or recurrent tumor is suspected, biopsy confirmation is usually required before further treatment is decided upon and such treatment will depend on the primary tumor site and type, the previous therapy received, and the current clinical findings. In this situation, pelvic clearance should be considered.
PELVIC CLEARANCE (EXENTERATION) Pelvic clearance is the removal of most or all of the pelvic viscera when pelvic tumors are large and locally extensive. It is divided into three types. Anterior pelvic clearance is the removal of the bladder, urethra and male or female sex organs with the formation of a urinary diversion using an ileal conduit. Posterior pelvic clearance involves resection of the rectum and the male or female pelvic sex organs with a bowel anastomosis or formation of an end colostomy. In male patients, the bladder is reanastomosed to the membranous urethra. Total pelvic clearance is when the entire contents of the extraperitoneal pelvic cavity are resected. In these procedures, the vagina is usually only partially resected and the remnant oversewn to
form a foreshortened vagina. Pelvic lymph node resection is performed in those patients undergoing primary surgery or in those with recurrence who have not already had lymph node dissection. In some patients, pelvic clearance includes resection of the pelvic floor and perineum. If perineal resection is extensive, reconstruction with skin and muscle flaps is needed. Previously, tumor involvement of the iliac vessels rendered the patient ineligible for pelvic clearance, but recent improvements in surgical techniques and perioperative support mean that vascular resection and grafting can be contemplated. Tumor infiltration into the sacrum below S2/S3 can be treated by partial sacrectomy and recent extended exenteration procedures have included sacral resection above S2/S3 and the use of bone grafts to reconstruct the pelvic ring. Previously, pelvic sidewall invasion was considered a contraindication to pelvic clearance, but in the United States of America and some European countries, patients with sidewall disease may be treated by muscle and bone resection often with concurrent high dose rate intraoperative radiotherapy.
Indications for Pelvic Clearance The commonest tumor treated by pelvic clearance is centrally recurrent cervical cancer. Patients with other gynecological malignancies which recur in the central pelvis, such as vaginal cancer, may also be eligible. Because ovarian cancer metastasizes widely within the abdomen and pelvis, it is not usually considered amenable to exenteration, unless there is an isolated, localized pelvic mass. Locally advanced and recurrent rectal cancers and less frequently recurrent bladder cancer can be treated by exenteration. The results of exenteration for advanced prostate cancer are poor and patients with this condition are usually considered ineligible. Rare pelvic tumors such as sarcoma are also potentially curable by exenteration.
Outcome after Pelvic Clearance In carefully selected patients, the outcome after pelvic clearance is 98% survival in the immediate postoperative period with a 20% to 60% survival at five years. When exenteration is performed for gynecological cancers, five-year survival is 40% to 60% but historically has been approximately 20% less for colorectal cancer. Recently, there have been improved five-year survival figures for pelvic clearance surgery for colorectal cancer in some centers, comparable to those for gynecological cancer. Patients in whom exenteration is performed as a primary treatment have a better five-year survival compared with
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those operated on for recurrence, and patients with primary tumors which are node negative have a high five-year survival of 80%. Relapse after pelvic clearance is nearly always local and approximately half of the patients also have systemic metastases.
THE ROLE OF MRI IN TUMOR RECURRENCE AND PELVIC CLEARANCE MRI has a role in the identification of recurrent carcinomas of the cervix, vagina, and vulva as well as the bladder and anorectum. In patients who have undergone radical prostatectomy and who then develop a rising prostate-specific antigen, MRI may be used to identify tumor recurrence in the surgical bed. For ovarian cancers, CT is often more appropriate for the identification of abdominopelvic tumor recurrence.
PATIENT EVALUATION BEFORE PELVIC CLEARANCE Because of its superior contrast resolution, multiplanar imaging facility, and excellent spatial resolution provided by a pelvic phased-array coil, MRI is an integral part of the intensive clinical and radiological work-up of patients prior to pelvic clearance. Clinical evaluation includes examination under anesthesia (EUA) to determine tumor mobility under conditions of optimal muscle relaxation. The surgeon assesses central visceral involvement by palpation and by cystoscopy, rectosigmoidoscopy, and vaginoscopy with biopsy where appropriate. Tumor fixity to the pelvic sidewall and floor is sought. Laparoscopy may be performed to assess the abdominal cavity in patients with primary disease, but treatment-related adhesions often make laparoscopy hazardous in patients with recurrence.
Radiological Evaluation Relevant clinical information which should be available to the radiologist includes l l l l
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the histological type and stage of the primary tumor; previous treatments and when they were administered; current clinical symptoms; any recent biopsy procedure, including the date of the biopsy, the number and sites of biopsy, and the histological or cytological findings; the proposed management.
It is necessary to have the patient’s previous cross-sectional imaging available for comparison with the current examination. Radiological investigation has three purposes: 1.
2.
To confirm the presence of an abnormality, which is likely to be tumor, and to identify sites suitable for clinical or image-guided biopsy. Tumor is easily identified when it presents as a welldefined mass. Infiltrative disease is more difficult to diagnose and to differentiate from the effects of previous treatment, particularly radiotherapy. In this situation, interpretation relies on close scrutiny of the images and careful comparison with previous cross-sectional examinations. To delineate local tumor extent and to identify additional pelvic tumor deposits separate from the main tumor mass, and enlarged pelvic lymph nodes. Structures to be assessed are the central pelvic organs, the pelvic sidewall, the pelvic floor, and the sacrum, including the exiting sacral nerve roots. In addition, involvement of small bowel loops, the cecum, the
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sigmoid mesocolon, or the small bowel mesentery by the superior most extent of the tumor mass should be documented. Evaluation of the ureters must include their course and any displacement or obstruction produced by the mass. Disease involving the anterior abdominal wall should be identified. Major blood vessel involvement must be documented, particularly of the common and external iliac vessels. Imaging evidence of a hypervascular tumor mass should be recorded and is shown by the presence of multiple collateral vessels. Tumor extension to involve major nerves such as the sciatic nerve or femoral nerve should be sought and any extension of tumor through the sciatic notch identified. Invasion of the lumbar spine rules out curative exenteration. If ascites is present then the peritoneum should be assessed for possible implants, as should pelvic bowel loops. To identify metastatic disease outside the pelvis. Metastatic abdominal tumor may be identified on MRI, but this often requires long scan times and intravenous contrast medium administration. In most cases, a CT scan is required to permit evaluation of the lungs and liver and can identify metastatic tumor within the abdomen or disease involving the abdominal wall. 18FDG PET-CT is very sensitive for the detection of extrapelvic metastases and is indicated in the work-up of patients with rectal and cervical cancer recurrence, while remembering that mucinous rectal cancers can sometimes be associated with false negative 18FDG PET-CT scans.
The imaging contributes to a multidisciplinary team decision about the feasibility of exenterative surgery, and whether it is likely to be curative or palliative. Continuing advances in surgical techniques mean that eligibility criteria for pelvic clearance are increasing and fewer radiological features are absolute contraindications. In our practice, radiological findings which usually disqualify patients from pelvic clearance are extension to the pelvic sidewall, invasion of the lumbar spine or sacrum above S2/S3, involvement of the lumbosacral plexus or sciatic nerve, tumor extension through the sciatic notch, and involvement of the small bowel mesentery. Relative contraindications are major vessel involvement and metastatic disease. The former increases the complexity of surgery and the latter renders exenteration palliative, although it may still be beneficial if it improves the patient’s quality of life and does not cause significant morbidity. When pelvic clearance is to be performed, an appropriately skilled surgical team is constituted to enable a safe and effective procedure, and the patient is counseled about the extent of surgery required and the likelihood of one or multiple stomas.
MRI Technique Patients should be scanned with a phased-array pelvic surface coil and high-resolution thin sections performed to optimize spatial resolution. The entire tumor should be imaged, and this may necessitate two contiguous sequences in some planes. T1-weighted images are obtained in the transaxial plane to assess the tumor for hemorrhage and the pelvis and retroperitoneum for lymph node enlargement. High-resolution turbo spin echo T2-weighted pelvic sequences are required in all three planes to adequately assess tumor extent and to examine the signal intensity characteristics of any enlarged lymph nodes. A smooth muscle relaxant such as hyoscine-n-butylbromide (Buscopan1)
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is indicated to decrease bowel motion artifact and increase diagnostic confidence. Although routine intravenous contrast administration is not recommended, dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI may be helpful in some patients who have been previously treated with radiotherapy. Diffusion-weighted imaging appears promising in the further investigation of indeterminate lesions identified on conventional MRI.
ACCURACY OF MRI IN RECURRENCE The accuracy of MRI for diagnosis of recurrent disease varies depending on the tumor type and morphological appearance of the recurrence. In locally recurrent prostate cancer, the sensitivity and specificity of MRI can be up to 100% when typical signal intensity appearances are seen in a palpable tumor nodule (usually intermediate to high T2-weighted signal for recurrences). However, in rectal cancer the effects of surgery and radiotherapy make recurrence more difficult to identify and this is often compounded by the infiltrative nature of the disease process. The recurrences may be high, intermediate, or low signal intensity on T2-weighted images. High signal intensity inflammation, edema, and acute or subacute radiotherapy effect may mimic tumor, and low signal established radiation fibrosis may be indistinguishable from tumors with a high fibrotic component. Diagnostic accuracy for recurrent rectal cancer is 75% using conventional sequences. Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI results in greater enhancement of rectal tumor recurrence than treatment effect and hence improved sensitivity and specificity. In cervical cancer recurrence, diagnostic accuracy has been reported as 74% employing T2weighted images, with sensitivities and specificities of 90% and 38%. Using dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI and pharmacokinetic analysis, accuracy of diagnosing cervical cancer recurrence rises to over 90%. However, this technique requires more sophisticated image analysis. There is a paucity of evidence about diffusion-weighted MRI in recurrent pelvic cancer, but in small numbers of patients it has been shown to have high sensitivity and improved specificity if fused with fast spin echo T2-weighted sequences. This is because image fusion allows better anatomical localization and accurate identification of susceptibility artifacts which may be confused with tumor.
the pelvic sidewall and for lymph node metastases. In 27 patients with recurrent pelvic bowel cancer, MRI was more accurate than EUA by approximately 15% in determining tumor involvement of the anterior, lateral, and posterior pelvis, with an overall MRI accuracy of 90%. The negative predictive values for organ and sidewall involvement were high in this study exceeding 90%. More recently, MRI performed at 1 T was shown to have a sensitivity of 85% and specificity of 52% for predicting complete tumor resection by pelvic clearance in 43 patients predominantly suffering from gynecological cancer.
PITFALLS OF MRI l
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Infiltrative recurrence may be difficult to distinguish from treatment effect, particularly after radiotherapy. The difficulty increases if the tumor is of low or intermediate signal on T2WI. It is important to compare sequential examinations, to assess the patient for disease outside the treatment field, and to consider multiple biopsies. PET-CT may be of value in these patients. In some cases, it may be necessary to consider exploratory laparotomy. Pelvic organ involvement may be difficult to exclude when there are large masses which compress and displace the pelvic viscera simulating infiltration. It is necessary to assess the margin between the tumor and the viscera on all images and look for an irregular interface with contiguous tumor within the organ or its lumen. Small-volume peritoneal, omental, or mesenteric deposits can be difficult to identify separate from abdominal structures unless technique is meticulous. Optimal assessment includes thin section, fat-suppressed, contrast-enhanced MRI. If there is uncertainty then CT may be required. Lymph node enlargement may occur secondary to sepsis in patients with extensive pelvic tumors, particularly when there is fistula or abscess formation, but also if the tumor is necrotic. A helpful pointer to metastatic lymph node enlargement is when the T2-weighted signal intensity of the node is similar to the primary tumor T2-weighted signal, or if there is central nodal necrosis in those patients with squamous cell tumors. If necessary, image-guided biopsy can be performed.
ACCURACY OF MRI BEFORE PELVIC CLEARANCE There are few published papers reporting the use of MRI in patients prior to pelvic clearance. In an early study of 23 patients, MRI was shown to be accurate in selection of appropriate patients for exenteration, exceeding 80% when MRI and laparotomy findings were compared. In this study, MRI had high negative predictive values for tumor extension to
MRI AFTER PELVIC CLEARANCE After pelvic clearance, clinical assessment for local relapse is more difficult since access to the pelvic viscera has been lost and endoscopy and biopsy are not possible. The most appropriate pelvic surveillance is by MRI, to allow early detection of further relapse which may still be amenable to surgery.
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Figure 15.1 Residual tumor mass post radiotherapy. Transaxial T2WI demonstrating a residual bladder tumor (T) obstructing the left ureter (arrow) and associated with a left anterolateral paravesical lymph node (small curved arrow).
Figure 15.2 Failure to develop normal post treatment appearances. Sagittal T2WI (A) pre and (B) six months post treatment in a patient with cervical cancer. The patient had a bulky, partially necrotic, endocervical tumor (T), and after chemoradiotherapy there is a persistent smaller mass (arrows in B).
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Figure 15.3 Recurrent cervical cancer. Sagittal T2WI demonstrating a recurrent tumor mass (T) in the endocervix and lower uterine body one year after chemoradiotherapy. The patient also has a lower third vaginal recurrence (arrows) involving the urethra. Note the treatment induced mucosal edema of the posterior bladder (arrowheads).
Figure 15.4 Infiltrative bladder cancer recurrence. Sagittal T2WI demonstrating diffuse low-signal intensity tumor (T) of the bladder wall with extension into the distal portion of the urachus (short arrow) and further diffuse soft tissue band-like stranding of the peritoneum anteriorly (arrowheads) and presacral fascia (long arrows). The symmetrical nature of the abnormalities makes differentiation from radiotherapy treatment effect difficult.
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Figure 15.5 Recurrent tumor in the prostate bed after radical prostatectomy. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI demonstrating a small soft tissue mass (arrows) behind the anastomosis and beneath the vertical scar from resection of the seminal vesicles (open arrows in B). The mass is indenting the anterior wall of the rectum (arrowheads). It is of intermediate signal intensity, higher than the anastomotic site (asterisks) and the muscle of the pelvic floor.
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Figure 15.6 Anterior pelvic clearance. (A) Sagittal T2WI in a male, and (B, C) in female patients. In A the bladder, prostate, and seminal vesicles have been resected. A small postsurgical collection is seen (asterisk) in the bladder bed. Note the tethering of the rectosigmoid to the margin of the collection. In B, the bladder, urethra, uterus, and vagina have been resected. Fat fills the surgical bed. This can be due to surgical placement of the omentum to prevent small bowel loops extending into the true pelvis. In C, the patient has undergone anterior pelvic clearance with preservation of the lower third of the vagina (arrows). Note the postsurgical scarring (asterisk) in the urethral bed.
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Figure 15.7 Posterior pelvic clearance. (A) Sagittal T2WI in a male and (B, C) in female patients. In A, the patient has undergone an abdominoperineal resection with removal of the prostate and seminal vesicles and reanastomosis of the bladder (B) to the membranous urethra. In this patient, note an incidental postsurgical hematoma (asterisk) in the presacral space. In B, the patient has undergone abdominoperineal resection with removal of the uterus and vagina. Note the extensive band-like postoperative change in the presacral space (arrows). The bladder and urethra demonstrate slight posterior prolapse with an increased angle between the symphysis pubis and the urethra (arrowheads). Note the perineal skin graft (curved arrows) with band-like margins. Omental fat (asterisk) has been transposed into the presacral space. In C, the patient has undergone resection of the pelvic floor musculature with inferior herniation and rotation of the posterior bladder (arrows) and urethra (arrowheads).
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Figure 15.8 Total pelvic clearance. Sagittal T2WI (A) in a male and (B) in a female post total pelvic clearance. In A, note the bandlike fibrosis involving the pelvic floor and presacral region (arrows). A perineal skin graft has been used and the fibrotic margin between the graft and the residual perineal skin is seen (arrowheads). A small postsurgical collection is noted (asterisk). Pelvic small bowel has not prolapsed into the low pelvis and this may be due to omental interposition. In B, small bowel has partially prolapsed into the low pelvis and is tethered to the abdominal wall (open arrow).
Figure 15.9 Central pelvic recurrence eligible for pelvic clearance surgery. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI in a patient with recurrent ovarian cancer limited to the pelvis. The tumor (T) involves the vaginal vault (arrow in B) and is indenting the posterior wall of the bladder and anterior wall of the rectum. In A, there is evidence of early involvement of the left anterior rectal wall (arrowhead). Note the close apposition of the sigmoid colon (curved arrow in B). Extent of surgery required by MRI criteria: posterior pelvic clearance with possible sigmoid resection. Abbreviation: MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
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Figure 15.10 Sigmoid cancer recurrence involving the rectum, uterus, and bladder. (A) Sagittal and (B) coronal T2WI demonstrating a large tumor (T) involving the rectum and sigmoid colon and posterosuperior bladder wall (arrows). Tumor extends to indent the posterior aspect of the cervix (curved arrow) and the uterus is completely engulfed. A contiguous sigmoid mesenteric lymph node (arrowhead) is seen. The left ureter is obstructed (arrow in B). Extent of surgery required by MRI criteria: total pelvic clearance with preservation of the pelvic floor and distal vagina.
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Figure 15.11 Tumor mass involving the bladder, seminal vesicles, rectum, and pelvic floor. (A, B) Transaxial and (C) coronal T2WI in which a large soft tissue sarcomatous tumor (T) can be seen to displace and infiltrate the rectum (arrows) with high signal edema or hemorrhage of the rectal mucosa best seen on the coronal view (arrowheads). The tumor mass is displacing the lower rectum and anal canal, and infiltrating the pelvic floor on the right side with extension into the right ischioanal fossa (IAF). The right seminal vesicle and the medial left seminal vesicle (SV) are totally engulfed by tumor which is also involving the right lateral bladder wall (open arrows in A). Extent of surgery required by MRI criteria: total pelvic clearance with resection of the pelvic floor.
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Figure 15.12 Tumor involving the seminal vesicles and presacral fascia. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI demonstrating a recurrent rectal tumor (T) involving the seminal vesicles and extending posteriorly to involve the presacral fascia (arrows in B). One small left internal iliac node is seen (arrowhead in A), which is not significant by size criteria, but whose signal intensity is similar to that of the tumor proper. Note that the sacrum is not involved and that the prostate (P) is also free from tumour infiltration. The tumor abuts the posterior wall of the bladder (B) to which it may be adherent, but there is no evidence of tumor extension into or through the wall, with preservation of the normal low signal intensity of the bladder wall. Extent of the surgery required by MRI criteria: posterior exenteration, prostatectomy, and possible cystectomy since the tumor may be adherent to the posterior bladder wall. Although the prostate is not involved, it has to be removed with the seminal vesicles.
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Figure 15.13 Tumor involving the pelvic floor. (A, B) Transaxial T2WI in a patient with local recurrence of a transitional cell carcinoma after cystectomy. The tumor mass (T) involves the right puborectalis component of the levator ani muscle (arrows) with extension into the anterior ischioanal fossa and with involvement of a portion of the right corpus cavernosum (arrowhead in B). Medially the disease involves the right wall of the vagina (V), and there is lobular compression and displacement of the anal canal (open arrow in B). Note that there is no extension of disease to directly abut or involve the inferior pubic ramus. Extent of surgery required by MRI criteria: total pelvic clearance including the pelvic floor and perineum.
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Figure 15.14 Perineal involvement by recurrent vaginal cancer. (A–D) Transaxial T2WI demonstrating a recurrent vaginal tumor (T). In A, there is contiguous tumor (crossed arrows) extending from the left vagina to the left lateral margin of the urethra (Ur). Note the abnormal signal intensity of the urethra proper with intermediate to low-signal intensity tumor within it (asterisk) and loss of its normal target appearance. In B and C, the mass can be seen to extend posteriorly to involve the anterior anal canal (small arrow), laterally and anteriorly to involve the anteroinferior recess of the ischioanal fossa and to abut the left crus of the clitoris (arrowheads in C), to extend into the anterior aspect of the left ischioanal fossa (open arrow in B), and to directly abut the periosteum of the inferior pubic ramus (curved arrows in B). The tumor mass is involving the perineal body (short arrows in D). Also note the left inguinal node (N) in B and C, which is not enlarged by size criteria, but whose signal intensity is similar to the signal intensity of the tumor. A similar signal, small left anatomical obturator node (ON) is seen between obturator externus (OE) and pectineus (P) on the left side in A (small arrow). Extent of surgery required by MR criteria: total pelvic clearance, resection of the pelvic floor and perineum, local resection of the left inferior pubic ramus, and insertion of a myocutaneous flap. A left inguinal lymph node dissection may be required if ultrasound guided biopsy of the suspect lymph node is positive, but the left anatomical obturator lymph node would not be dissected routinely and the patient requires additional radiotherapy or chemotherapy.
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Figure 15.15 Recurrent sarcoma involving small bowel. (A) Transaxial and (B) sagittal T2WI demonstrating a large central pelvic tumor (T) with fluid-fluid levels in the mass because of hemorrhage. The anterosuperior surface of the mass is infiltrating around lower signal intensity small bowel loops (arrows in A and B). Posteriorly the tumor is also infiltrating into the rectosigmoid (arrowheads in A). A component of the mass is displacing the rectus abdominis muscles anteriorly (open arrows in A), but there is no evidence of tumor infiltrating into the rectus abdominis muscles as their signal intensity is preserved. The bladder (B) is compressed but not involved by the mass. Note incidental arachnoid cysts (Cy) in the sacral spine in B. Extent of surgery required by MRI criteria: local resection, rectosigmoid colectomy, and small bowel resection.
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Figure 15.16 Recurrent cervical cancer involving the bladder, vaginal vault, sigmoid colon, and small bowel loops. (A, B) Sagittal T2WI demonstrating a large recurrent tumor mass (T) extending into the bladder (arrows), vaginal vault (arrowheads), onto the surface of the pelvic small bowel loops in the sacral concavity (asterisk in A), and into a pelvic bowel loop (curved arrows in B). The sigmoid colon (open arrow in B) is also involved. Extent of surgery required by MRI criteria: anterior pelvic clearance, sigmoid colectomy, and small bowel resection.
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Figure 15.17 Recurrent pelvic tumor involving the anterior abdominal wall. (A) Transaxial T2WI, (B) sagittal T2Wl, and (C) sagittal STIR images in a patient with a recurrent sigmoid tumor (T), which is extending into the anterior abdominal wall (arrows), involving the bladder (arrowheads in B and C) and extending posterosuperiorly to abut the presacral fascia (curved arrow in B and C). There is air in the bladder which, in the absence of recent instrumentation, implies the presence of a fistula or infection with a gas-forming organism. The posterior bladder wall (small arrows) is thickened but of higher signal intensity than the regions of tumor infiltration; this is likely to be inflammation. Note a cluster of sigmoid mesenteric lymph nodes (open arrows in B and C). Note also that the patient has undergone a previous hysterectomy. Extent of surgery by MRI criteria: cystectomy, abdominal wall resection with grafting, colectomy. A small amount of fluid (asterisk) is seen beneath the anterior abdominal wall immediately adjacent to the symphysis pubis; this is a site for potential spread of infection which could lead to osteitis pubis.
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Figure 15.18 Pelvic tumor mass involving the external iliac vessels. (A–C) Coronal T2WI demonstrating compression and displacement of the external iliac vein, which is seen as a fine low-signal intensity band at the margin of the large pelvic tumor (T) (arrows in A). Distal to the mass the vein demonstrates high signal intensity because of slow flow within its lumen (V in A, B, and C). The left common and external iliac arteries are also markedly displaced and compressed by the tumor mass (arrowheads in A–C).In these circumstances, it is often difficult to differentiate between adherence and involvement of the vessels. The pelvic surgeon should be warned that a vascular surgeon may be required to assist at the procedure. Abbreviation: B, bladder.
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Figure 15.19 Direct vascular invasion by tumor. (A, B) Coronal T2WI in a patient with a vaginal recurrence of an endometrial stromal tumor (T). In A, an apparent right internal iliac lymph node is seen (arrowheads), but this is shown to be a portion of the distended and directly invaded right internal iliac vein (arrows in B). Note the identical signal intensity of the recurrent mass and the intravenous tumor as well as the continuity between the two.
Figure 15.20 Tumor extension to the pelvic sidewall. (A) Transaxial T1W and (B) T2WI demonstrating a recurrent cervical tumor (T) extending to the right pelvic sidewall (arrows). The patient also has involvement of the rectum (arrowheads) and fluid in the vaginal vault (asterisk), which was because of a vesicovaginal fistula. Pelvic sidewall disease is a contraindication to pelvic clearance.
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Figure 15.21 Extension of tumor into the sacrum. (A) Sagittal T1WI and (B) T2WI demonstrating a recurrent ovarian tumor mass (T) involving the rectum (R) and extending through the presacral fascia (arrowheads) to thin the cortex of the sacrum at S2 and S3 levels (small arrows). This patient was ineligible for salvage surgery, and she went on to have radiotherapy as the relapse was localized.
Figure 15.22 Multifocal presacral recurrence with breach of the presacral fascia and adherence to the left S1 nerve root. (A, B) Sagittal T2WI, (C) coronal T2WI, (D) sagittal maximum intensity projection (MIP) from a PET scan and (E, F) transaxial fused PET-CT images through the pelvis. There is a presacral rectal tumor recurrence (T) in a patient who had previously undergone AP resection for rectal cancer. The mass is involving the presacral fascia (arrows in A), has extended through the presacral fascia to directly abut S3 (arrowheads in B), and is adherent to the left S1 nerve root (curved arrow in C). A further tumor deposit is seen more inferiorly (open arrows in C). On the PET-CT images, the two pelvic tumor deposits are 18FDG avid (arrows in D, E, and F) and the patient also has 18FDG avid liver metastases (arrowheads in D). A chronic pelvic collection (asterisk in A, B, and C) was present as a complication of surgery. Involvement of the S1 nerve root means that this patient was ineligible for salvage surgery. Even with liver metastases, pelvic clearance may be performed as a palliative procedure for symptom control. (Continued)
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Figure 15.22 (Continued )
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Figure 15.23 Extension into the sacrum and involvement of the sacral nerve roots and sciatic nerve. (A) Transaxial T1W, (B) transaxial T2W, and (C, D) coronal T2WI demonstrating a presacral recurrent rectal tumor (T) infiltrating the sacrum (arrows in A), involving S1 nerve root and foramen (arrowheads in B) and extending along the sciatic nerve (curved arrows in C and D). There is a left pelvic sidewall lymph node metastasis (asterisk in A and B). Note early wasting of the left gluteal musculature. Sacral invasion above S2/S3 and sciatic nerve involvement are contraindications to pelvic clearance.
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Figure 15.24 Involvement of the sacrum, sacral nerve roots, sciatic notch, and sciatic nerve. Coronal T2WI in a patient with a chondrosarcoma demonstrating a huge pelvic tumor (T), with signal voids due to dilated blood vessels within it indicating a vascular mass, which is infiltrating the sacrum (arrow) with encroachment into the right S1 foramen (arrowheads). The tumor is extending through the sciatic notch (open arrows) and both the right sacral roots and the proximal sciatic nerve are completely engulfed by tumor. Note that the distal sciatic nerve appears normally positioned (SN). The patient had severe neurological symptoms of pain and weakness and the gluteal muscles are shown to be completely wasted on the right side (asterisk).
Figure 15.25 Ascites, implants, and lymph node metastasis in a patient being evaluated for pelvic clearance. Transaxial T2WI demonstrating a huge central pelvic tumor (T) with fluid-fluid levels (arrowheads) likely to indicate hemorrhage within the mass. In the posterior pelvis, there is a small volume of ascites (A) and peritoneal implants (open arrows). Note an enlarged left internal iliac lymph node (curved arrow), which has a similar signal intensity to the tumor proper making it likely to be a metastatic node. This patient is ineligible for curative pelvic clearance.
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Figure 15.26 Large pelvic mass simulating visceral involvement. (A) Sagittal and (B) transaxial T2WI in a patient with a large pelvic tumor (T), which is compressing both the rectum and the bladder. The posterior bladder wall demonstrates altered signal intensity on the sagittal images (arrows) but can be seen to be preserved on the transaxial image (arrows). This finding is explained by the sagittal imaging plane, which is not perpendicular to the bladder wall. On the transaxial image, the bladder wall is shown to be intact. Therefore, it is important to assess organ involvement in two planes. The ureters are dilated (arrowheads in B) because of compression by the central mass, although they are not obstructed and could be traced around the margins of the mass down to the vesicoureteric junction.
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Figure 15.27 Mucinous rectal cancer recurrence with a false negative PET-CT scan. (A) Transaxial T1W, (B) transaxial T2W, (C) PET-MIP, and (D) transaxial fused PET-CT images in a patient with a small-volume mucinous rectal cancer recurrence (arrows in A and B). A ureteric stent is seen as a signal void in the center of the recurrence (arrowhead in A and B). The PET image demonstrates holdup of activity in the right hydroureter (arrow in C) but no increased activity in the recurrent tumor (arrows in D). In mucinous gastrointestinal tumors, the role of MRI in assessment of disease extent is extremely important as these tumors are a known cause of false negative PET-CT examinations. (Continued)
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Figure 15.27 (Continued )
Figure 15.28 Diffusion-weighted imaging in pelvic recurrence. (A) Transaxial T2WI, (B, C) diffusion-weighted (b-values 300 and 1000), respectively, and (D) ADC images in a patient with possible recurrent presacral rectal tumor (T). There was uncertainty about the etiology of the encapsulated heterogeneous high signal T2W presacral lesion. On the diffusion-weighted images (DWI), the lesion (asterisk) demonstrates restricted diffusion of its margin (arrows in C) with a low ADC (arrowheads in D) consistent with recurrent tumor. This was confirmed histologically.
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Figure 15.28 (Continued )
Figure 15.29 Diffusion-weighted imaging in pelvic recurrence. (A) Transaxial T2WI in a patient with cervical cancer previously treated by radical hysterectomy. There was clinical concern about vaginal recurrence and asymmetrical expansion of the right vaginal vault was noted (arrow). However, there was no restricted diffusion and the ADC was normal. (B)Transaxial T2W, (C, D) diffusion-weighted (b-values 300 and 1000), and (E) ADC images in the same patient at the level of the lower third of the vagina demonstrate subtle high signal intensity within the right vaginal mucosa (arrow in B) with evidence of restricted diffusion and a low ADC (arrows in C, D, and E). The patient had biopsy confirmation of small-volume disease at this site. (Continued )
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Figure 15.29 (Continued )
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Figure 15.30 MRI surveillance after total pelvic clearance. (A) Sagittal T2WI in a patient with colorectal cancer treated by abdominoperineal resection. There is a small volume, high-signal intensity vaginal vault recurrence (arrow) adherent to the bladder. The patient went on to have a total pelvic clearance. (B) Sagittal and (C, D) coronal T2W images one year later demonstrate multifocal pelvic floor recurrence (arrowheads). Abnormalities in the sacrum and iliac bones (open arrows in C and D) are due to insufficiency changes consequent upon previous radiotherapy, and an apparent presacral cyst (asterisk in B) is part of the ileal conduit.
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Figure 15.31 Sacral recurrence after total pelvic clearance. Sagittal T2WI demonstrating a recurrent rectal tumor (T) involving the sacrum and extending up to the anterior margin of S2/S3 (arrow). Immediately anterior to the mass is a postsurgical fibrotic band (arrowheads). Further salvage surgery is possible in this patient and would involve sacrectomy at S2/S3 level.
FURTHER READING Crowe PJ, Temple WJ, Lopez MJ, et al. Pelvic exenteration for advanced pelvic malignancy. Semin Surg Oncol 1999; 17:152–160. Good review of exenteration. Forner DM, Meyer A, Lampe B. Preoperative assessment of complete tumour resection by magnetic resonance imaging in patients undergoing pelvic exenteration. Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol 2010; 148(2):182–185. One of the most recent and largest studies to retrospectively assess MR imaging in a population undergoing pelvic clearance. Exclusion of those patients undergoing open and shut laparotomy means that the value of MR imaging as a sieve for surgical eligibility in comparison to clinical assessment was not evaluated. Hawighorst H, Knapstein PG, Schaeffer U, et al. Pelvic lesions in patients with treated cervical carcinoma: efficacy of pharmacokinetic analysis of dynamic MR images in distinguishing recurrent tumors from benign conditions. AJR Am J Roentgenol 1996; 166 (2):401–408. In this paper, sophisticated analysis of dynamic contrastenhanced MRI improved the evaluation of treated cervical cancer patients with suspected recurrence. Kinkel K, Tardivon AA, Soyer P, et al. Dynamic contrast-enhanced subtraction versus T2-weighted spin-echo MR imaging in the follow-up of colorectal neoplasm: a prospective study of 41 patients. Radiology 1996; 200:453–458. This paper discusses the advantages of dynamic MR imaging in recurrence.
Martinez S, Dowdy S, Lanowska M, et al. Exenteration 60 years after first description. Results of a survey among US and German Gynecologic Oncology Centers. Int J Gynecol Cancer 2009; 19(5):974–977. This paper surveys different management practice in patients being considered for exenteration. Mu¨ller-Schumpfle M, Brix G, Layer G, et al. Recurrent rectal cancer: diagnosis with dynamic MR imaging. Radiology 1993; 189:881–889. One of the original papers reporting the reliability of MR dynamic contrast enhancement in differentiating tumor recurrence from fibrosis and comparing it to standard T2-weighted imaging. Robinson P, Carrington BM, Swindell R, et al. Accuracy of MRI in determining extent of recurrent pelvic bowel cancer prior to salvage surgery. Clin Radiol 2002; 57:514–522. A comparison of EUA and MRI assessment before attempted exenteration. Schmidt GP, Baur-Melnyk A, Haug A, et al. Whole body MRI at 1.5 T and 3 T compared with FDG-PET-CT for the detection of tumour recurrence in patients with colorectal cancer. Eur Radiol 2009; 19:1366– 1378. This paper demonstrates that PET-CT is superior in the detection of lymph node metastases in patients with recurrent colorectal cancer. Silverman JM, Krebs TL. MR imaging evaluation with a transrectal surface coil of local recurrence of prostatic cancer in men who have undergone radical prostatectomy. AJR Am J Roentgenol 1997; 168 (2):379–385. Useful paper discussing the power of MRI to identify local recurrence in this population.
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Index
Page numbers followed by f (italics) refer to figures and those followed by t (italics) refer to tables.
Abdominoperineal resection (APR) for anal cancer, 178 ADC. See Apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) Adenomyosis and endometrial cancer, 94f–95f Adnexal metastases from colorectal adenocarcinoma, 286f a-Fetoprotein (AFP), 99 AFP. See a-Fetoprotein (AFP) AJCC. See American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) ‘‘AJCC Cancer Staging Manual,’’ 2 American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC), 2, 178, 202t Anal canal, 181f anatomy, 20 MR appearance, 20, 35f Anal cancer, 178–200 epidemiology, 178 histopathology, 178 imaging protocols, 6t lymph node involvement, 266f metastatic disease, 179 MRI of, 179–200 imaging features, 179 indications, 179 pitfalls of, 180 technique, 179 nodal disease, 179 patterns of tumor spread, 178 post-chemoradiotherapy, 179–180 post-surgery, 180 prognostic indicators, 178 radiation reaction, 180 chronic, 195f residual/recurrent disease, 180 on DWI, 195f–196f following chemoradiotherapy, 198f following chemoradiotherapy and abdominoperineal resection, 197f following total pelvic clearance, 199f–200f retroperitoneal, porta hepatis, and liver metastases in, 191f staging accuracy, 179 T1, 182f T2, 182f–183f, 184f T2, with complete response to treatment, 192f T2, with complete response to treatment and persistent mucosal edema (pseudotumor), 193f–194f T3, 185f, 186f, 187f T3 squamous cell, with rectal extension, 187f–188f T3, with fistula, 191f T4, with vaginal invasion, 188f NI, 189f N2, 190f N3, 190f TNM staging classification for, 178, 179t treatment, 178–179
Anal sphincter, 16 Anal triangle anatomy, 21 ‘‘Anatomical obturator’’ nodes, 259 Anococcygeal body, 16 Anorectal junction cancer, 163f Anterior pelvic clearance, 288, 294f. See also Pelvic clearance (exenteration) Anus normal anatomy of, 181f Apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), 7, 40, 100, 262 APR. See Abdominoperineal resection (APR) Arteries anatomy, 21 Artifacts and strategies MR imaging protocols, 4 Bartholin’s glands, 20 Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), 7, 18, 32f, 34f, 223f Benign vertebral collapse bone metastases pitfall, 280f Bilateral groin dissection, in penile cancer appearance following, 252f reactive inguinal node following partial penectomy and, 253f tumor recurrence in left groin following, 254f Bladder cancer, 201–219 bone metastasis and, 213f cystectomy, recurrence following, 203 DCE analysis of post treatment, 7, 11f–12f diffuse, with layering, 215f epidemiology, 201 histopathology, 201 imaging protocols, 6t lymph node metastases, pattern alteration, 268f lymph node metastases/spread, 203 MRI of, 202–219 imaging features, 203 indications, 203 pitfalls of, 203 technique, 202 multifocal, 214f patterns of tumor spread, 201 polypoid T1 tumor, 206f post biopsy effect, 213f post-cystectomy, 216f, 217f post-radiotherapy, 216f, 217f primary tumor, 203, 217f prognostic indicators, 201 lymph node metastases, 201 multiple lesions, 201 tumor grade, 201 tumor stage, 201 recurrence, 292f residual/recurrent disease, 203 post cystectomy, 217f
[Bladder cancer] staging accuracy, 203 T, 202f T2a, 206f T4a, 208f, 209f T3b, 207f T3b N1, 210f T3b N2, 211f, 212f T3b, with tumor extending into left ureter, 215f T4b, 209f, 210f N2, 212f M1, bone metastasis, 213f M1, 213f treatment, 201–202 urachal cancer, 216f Bladder diverticula, 203 Bladder, urinary anatomy, 16–17 MR appearance, 17, 24f normal extreme distension, 204f–205f moderate distension, 204f wall trabeculation, 205f BLADE, 4 Bone island, benign bone metastases pitfall, 281f Bone marrow appearance, normal, 262, 273f Bone metastases, 261–263, 274f–284f on DWI, 276f imaging protocols, 6t MRI of accuracy in detection, 261 imaging features, 262 normal marrow appearances, 262 pitfalls, 262–263, 277f–284f technique, 261–262 from rectal cancer, 274f vertebral metastasis, 275f BPH. See Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) Brachytherapy for prostate cancer, 221 BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, 97 Breast cancer natal cleft metastasis, 286f uterine metastases from, 285f Bulbospongiosus, 16, 20 Bulbous urethra, 17 Buscopan1, 1, 3, 40, 260, 289–290 b-values, 7 CA-125. See Cancer/carbohydrate antigen-125 (CA-125) Cancer/carbohydrate antigen-125 (CA-125), 99 Cancer imaging, aims of, 2 Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), 99
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Cardinal ligaments, 16 CEA. See Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) Cervical anatomy, normal, 42f Cervical canal, 18 Cervical cancer, 38–75 after bilateral ovarian transposition, 60f after bilateral pelvic sidewall lymph node dissection, 60f anterior pelvic clearance, 75f chemotherapy, 40 CT and DWI of, 56f–57f early-stage disease, 41 epidemiology, 38 histopathology, 38 iliac lymph node metastases, 53f imaging protocols, 6t internal iliac and perirectal lymph node metastases in, 53f late-stage disease, 41–42 loss of cervical fibrous stroma, 58f lymph node involvement, 266f lymph node metastases, 52f–54f metastases in, 55f–55f MRI of imaging features, 40–41 indications, 40 pitfalls of, 41–42 technique, 40 nodal disease, 40–41 parametrial extension, 45f parametrial recurrence, 72f patterns of tumor spread, 38 pelvic clearance and, 288 pelvic metastatic lymph nodes in, 54f post-chemoradiotherapy, 41 evolution of, 63f–64f hydrometria and hematocolpos with residual cervical cancer, 68f progression, nonresponse of primary tumor and, 70f vesicovaginal fistula, 66f post-radiotherapy, 41 cervical stenosis with hydrometria, 67f hematometria, 67f response of cervical tumor, 62f–63f response of ovaries, 65f vesicouterine fistula, 65f post-surgery, 41 central pelvic and subcutaneous hematoma complicating radical hysterectomy, 61f post-radical hysterectomy, 59f unilocular lymphocele after radical hysterectomy, 62f pre-sacral lymph node metastases, 53f primary tumor, 40 prognostic indicators, 38–39 radiotherapy, 39–40 residual/recurrent disease, 41, 69f, 71f, 292f, 301f common iliac lymph node metastasis, 74f plaque-like tumor, after salvage hysterectomy, 74f with vesicovaginal/vesicorectal fistulae and involvement of left sciatic nerve, 73f small tumors and postbiopsy change, 58f staging accuracy, 40 T1b, 43f T1b1 N0/N1 M0, 44f T2a, 44f–45f T2b N0/N1, with parametrial extension, 45f T2b, with involvement of uterovesical ligament, 46f T2b, with parametrial vascularengulfment, 45f
[Cervical cancer staging accuracy, 40] T3a, 46ff T3b, with hydronephrosis, 47f T3b, with partial thickness rectal involvement, 50f T3b, with uterosacral extension, 48f T3b, with uterosacral extension to pelvic sidewal, 47f T4, 48f–49f, 50f–51f surgery, 39 treatment, 39–40 vagina post-radiotherapy, 129f upper mimicking outer cervical stroma, 59f Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN), 38 Cervix, 18, 19, 29f pseudoinvasion of, by endometrial cancer, 95f Chemical (frequency-selective) fat saturation, 4, 11f Chemical shift artifacts, 4 Chemical shift imaging (CSI), 7, 14f Chemoradiotherapy (CRT) for anal cancer, 179 and abdominoperineal resection, 197f post treatment, 179–180 recurrent following, 198f vaginal cancer, 118 Chemotherapy for cervical cancer, 40 for endometrial cancer, 78 for ovarian cancer, 99 for rectal cancer, 154 for vulval cancer, 136 CIN. See Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) Coccygei, 16 Colon cancer, imaging protocols, 6t Colorectal adenocarcinoma adnexal metastases from, 286f Colposcopy, 1 Common iliac lymph nodes, 21, 259, 267f Computed tomography (CT), 1 cervical cancer, 56f–57f Contrast enhancement techniques, 4, 6–7 Corpora cavernosa, 20 Corpus luteum, 19 Corpus spongiosum, 20 Cowper’s glands, 17, 21 CRT. See Chemoradiotherapy (CRT) CSI. See Chemical shift imaging (CSI) CT. See Computed tomography (CT) Cystectomy, radical for bladder cancer, 202 tumor recurrence following, 203 Cystoscopy, 1 DCE. See Dynamic contrast enhancement (DCE) DCE-MRI. See Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) Denonvillier’s fascia, 16, 18 Dermoid, 112f Diagnosis, tumor, 1, 2 Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), 3, 260 bone metastases on, 276f cervical cancer, 56f–57f and dynamic contrast imaging, 218f–219f ovarian cancer, 100 in pelvic mass tumor recurrence, 310f–312f of primary tumor, 217f in prostate cancer, 221 in rectal cancer, 154 residual anal cancer on, 195f–196f in vulval cancer, 136–137
Discitis bone metastases pitfall, 283f, 284f Dukes classification, 2, 153t DWI. See Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI), 101 Dynamic contrast enhancement (DCE), 6–7, 11f–12f EBRT. See External beam radiotherapy (EBRT) Echo planar imaging (EPI), 7 Ejaculatory ducts, 18 EMVI. See Extramural venous infiltration (EMVI) Endometrial cancer, 77–95 adenomyosis and, 94f–95f central recurrence of, 91f chemotherapy, 78 early stage disease, 79–80 epidemiology, 77 hematogenous spread, 79 histopathology, 77 imaging protocols, 6t late stage disease, 80 lymph node disease, 79 mesenchymal tumors, 79 MRI of imaging features, 79 indications, 78–79 pitfalls of, 79–80 technique, 78 nabothian cysts mimicking cervical invasion, 93f patterns of tumor spread, 77 primary tumor, 79 prognostic indicators, 77 pseudoinvasion of cervix by, 95f pseudomyometrial invasion due to fibroids, 94f radiotherapy, 78 recurrence of, 91f–92f residual/recurrent disease, 79 staging accuracy, 79 T1a N0 stage IA, 81f–83f T1a N0 stage IA leiomyosarcoma, 93f T1a N0 stage IB, 81f T1b N0 stage IB, 83f–85f T1b N1 stage IIIC leiomyosarcoma, 93f T1b stage IB (adenosarcoma), 92f T2 N0 stage II, 86f T3a N0 stage IIIA, 86f–87f T3b N0 stage IIIB, 88f–89f T4 N1 M1 stage IVB papillary serous, 90f surgery, 77–78 TNM and FIGO classification, 77, 78t treatment, 77–78 Endometrioma, 112f Endorectal coils (ERC) in prostate cancer, 221 EPI. See Echo planar imaging (EPI) Epididymis, 18 Epithelial ovarian tumors, 97, 98t of low malignant potential (LMP), 97, 98t ERC. See Endorectal coils (ERC) EUA. See Examination under anesthesia (EUA) Examination under anesthesia (EUA), 289, 290 Excision biopsy, 1 Exenteration (pelvic clearance). See Pelvic clearance (exenteration) External beam radiotherapy (EBRT) for prostate cancer, 220–221 External iliac lymph nodes, 21, 259, 270f Extramural venous infiltration (EMVI) T3 rectal cancer with, 161f
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INDEX Fallopian tubes. See Uterine tubes False pelvic cavity, 16 Fat saturation, 4, 11f FDG PET. See 18-Fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET) 18 FDG PET-CT, 40, 79 Fecal blood testing program, 152 Federation Internationale Gyne´cologie et Obste´trique (FIGO) classification, 2 cervical cancer, 38, 39t endometrial cancer, 77, 78t ovarian cancer, 100t vaginal cancer, 120, 121t vulval cancer, 135, 136t Fibrous prostatic sheath, 18 Field of view (FOV), 3 FIGO. See Federation Internationale Gyne´cologie et Obste´trique (FIGO) classification Flow artifacts, 4 18-Fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET), 259–260 FOV. See Field of view (FOV) Frequency-selective fat saturation, 4, 11f Functional MR imaging, 2 Fundus, 18 Gleason classification, for prostate cancers, 220 Graafian follicles, 19 Hartman’s procedure recurrent rectal cancer following, 173f–174f HCG. See Human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) Hemangioma bone metastases pitfall, 280f Hematogenous spread, in rectum, 155 Hemorrhoids pitfalls of MRI, in rectal cancer, 156, 176f Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC), 77 1 H MR spectroscopy, 7, 14f HNPCC. See Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) HNPCC/Lynch2 syndrome, 97 Hormone replacement therapy (HRT), 97 Hormone therapy for prostate cancer, 221 HPV. See Human papillomavirus (HPV) HRT. See Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) Human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG), 99 Human papillomavirus (HPV) penile cancer and, 236 vulval cancer and, 135 Hydrosalpinx, 110f–111f Hyoscine-n-butylbromide, 260, 289–290 Hyperemic marrow bone metastases pitfall, 277f Iliac arteries, 21 Iliac lymph node metastases cervical cancer, 53f Iliac lymph nodes common, 21, 22t external, 21 internal, 21 Iliococcygeus, 16 Iliopsoas bursa, 16, 261, 271f
Image-guided biopsy, 2 Incision biopsy, 1 Infundibulum, 19 Inguinal canal, 18 Inguinal lymph nodes, 21, 22t penile cancer and, 236 Internal iliac lymph nodes, 21, 22t, 259, 265f International Union against Cancer (UICC), 2 Ischiorectal fossae, 16
Jewitt–Strong–Marshall classification, 2
KRAS gene, 152
Lateral chain common iliac lymph nodes, 259 external iliac lymph nodes, 259 Levator ani muscle, 16 rectal cancer and, 163f, 164f Linitis plastica of lower rectum, 169f pitfalls of MRI, in rectal cancer, 156–157 Liver metastases, in anal cancer, 191f LMP. See Low malignant potential (LMP) Low malignant potential (LMP) epithelial ovarian tumors of, 97, 98t Lymph node anal cancer and, 189f anatomy, 21–22, 22f appearance, normal, 260, 264f–265f assessment, MRI technique for, 260 bladder cancer and, 201 common iliac, 21, 259, 267f external iliac nodes, 21, 259, 270f inguinal, 21 internal iliac nodes, 21, 22t, 259, 265f involvement in anal carcinoma, 266f involvement in cervical cancer, 266f involvement in prostatic carcinoma, 267f lumbar nodes, 22 MR appearance, 22 obturator nodes, 21 rectal cancer and, 155 sacral, 21 upper limit of, 22t vulval cancer and, 137 Lymph node metastases, 259–261, 265f–273f accuracy in detection, 259–260 cervical cancer, 52f–54f extracapsular extension of tumor, 269f imaging features of, 260–261 clustering, asymmetry, and contour, 261 shape, 261 signal intensity, 261 site, 261 size, 261 pattern alteration after bladder cancer surgery, 268f pelvic clearance and, 308f pitfalls, 261, 270f–273f arachnoid cysts, 273f iliopsoas bursa, 261, 271f lymph node hyperplasia, 261, 270f nodular peritoneal metastases, 261 normal anatomical structures, 261 postsurgical complications, 261, 272f retained normal ovary, 271f prognostic significance of, 259 TNM classification, 259 tumor signal, 269f
317
Magnetic resonance imaging equipment, 3 Magnetic resonance imaging protocols artifacts and strategies, 4 chemical (frequency-selective) fat saturation, 4, 11f contrast enhancement techniques, 4, 6–7 imaging parameters, 5t patient preparation and care, 3 specific cancer types, 4 T2W sequences (fast or turbo spin echo), 4 coronal oblique plane, 10f sagittal plane, 9f–10f transaxial oblique plane, 9f–10f transaxial plane, 8f T1W sequences (spin echo or gradient echo), 3–4 coronal plane, 4, 8f transaxial plane, 4, 8f Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), 40 in prostate cancer, 221 Malignant melanoma pelvic visceral metastases from, 285f Medial chain common iliac lymph nodes, 259 external iliac lymph nodes, 259 Mesorectal fascia infiltration, 154, 159f, 161f, 174f Mesorectal lymph node, benign, 166f Mesovarium, 19 Middle chain common iliac lymph nodes, 259 external iliac lymph nodes, 259 Motion artifacts, 4 MRS. See Magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) M stage, lymph node metastases, 259 Needle biopsy, 1 Nerves anatomy, 22 MR appearance, 22 N stage, lymph node metastases, 259 Nutrient foramen, normal bone metastases pitfall, 281f–282f Obturator internus, 16 Obturator nodes, 21, 22f, 22t Oral contraceptives, 19 Osseous metastases. See Bone metastases Osteomyelitis bone metastases pitfall, 283f, 284f Osteoporotic vertebral collapse bone metastases pitfall, 279f Ovarian cancer, 97–116 benign cystadenoma with prior hysterectomy, 114f bilateral ovarian metastases from breast carcinoma., 116f borderline tumors, 97, 98t chemotherapy, 99 dermoid, 112f endometrioma, 112f epidemiology, 97 epithelial tumors, 97, 98t FIGO and TNM classification of, 100t germ cell tumors, 97, 99t hematogenous spread, 101 histopathology, 97 hydrosalpinx, 110f–111f imaging protocols, 6t local invasion, 101 lymph node disease, 101
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318
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[Ovarian cancer] MR imaging of imaging features, 101 indications, 100 pitfalls, 101 technique, 99–100 patterns of tumor spread, 97 pelvic inclusion cyst, 111f on PET-CT, 114f polycystic ovary disease, 110f postoperative swelling of round ligaments, 111f primary tumor, 101 prognostic indicators, 97, 99 radiotherapy, 99 recurrent, 115f recurrent ovarian teratoma, 116f resolving hematoma, 113f sex cord stromal tumors, 97, 98t sites of origin of, 102f staging accuracy, 100–101 T1a, 103f T1b, 104f T1c, 104f T2a, 105f T2b, 105f T2c, 106f T3a, 106f T3b, 107f T3c, 107f–108f N1, 108f–109f M1, 109f surgery, 99 transcoelomic spread, 101 treatment, 99 tumor markers, 99 Ovary anatomy, 19 MR appearance, 19, 29f normal anatomy in reproductive age, 102f postmenopausal, 103f Paget’s disease bone metastases pitfall, 282f Parallel imaging techniques, 4, 7 Parametrium anatomy, 19 MR appearance, 19, 24f Parapelvic ligaments, 16 Pararectal fossae, 16 Parietal fascia, 16 Pelvic cavity, 16 Pelvic clearance (exenteration), 288–290, 291f–314f anterior, 288, 294f cervical cancer and, 288 imaging protocols, 6t indications for, 288 lymph node metastasis and, 308f MRI of, 289–290, 291f–314f pitfalls, 290 recurrence, 290 technique, 289–290 outcome, 288–289 overview, 288 patient evaluation before, 289–290 clinical evaluation, 289 radiological evaluation, 289 posterior, 288, 295f total, 288, 296f, 313f–314f Pelvic fascia, 16 Pelvic floor, 16 Pelvic inclusion cyst ovarian cancer, 111f
Pelvic lymph node metastases imaging protocols, 6t Pelvic metastases, 259–286 lymph node, 259–261 (See also Lymph node metastases) osseous (See Bone metastases) visceral, 263 Pelvic metastatic lymph nodes cervical cancer, 54f Pelvic sidewalls, 16 Pelvic viscera, 16–20 metastases to, 263, 285f Penectomy, for penile cancer, 237, 255f–257f partial, appearance following, 250f with an irregular appearance at penile stump, 251f subtotal, in penile crus following, 257f total, appearance following, 251f–252f Penile cancer, 236–257 anatomical stage/prognostic groups in, 237t bilateral groin dissection appearance following, 252f reactive inguinal node following partial penectomy and, 253f tumor recurrence in left groin following, 254f epidemiology, 236 histopathology, 236 and HPV, 236 left inguinal lymph node metastasis, 249f metastases within normal-sized inguinal nodes, 250f MRI of, 237–257 imaging features, 238 metastatic disease, 238 nodal disease, 238 pitfalls, 238 posttreatment appearances, 238 technique, 238 partial penectomy, appearance following, 250f with an irregular appearance at penile stump, 251f patterns of tumor spread, 236 prognostic indicators, 236 residual/recurrent tumors, 238, 250f–257f in penile crus following subtotal penectomy, 257f in penile stump following partial penectomy, causing urethral dilatation, 256f–257f in penile stump following partial penectomy, with further infiltrating tumor recurrence following salvage surgery, 255f–256f staging accuracy, 238 early T2, 241f T1, 240f T2, 242f, 243f T3, 245f, 246f T3, penis demonstrating urethral infiltration within glans, 244f T3, showing proximal extension along corpus spongiosum, 245f T3, with noncontiguous spread within corpus cavernosa, 247f T3, with proximal extension, 248f T4, with tumor extension from crus of penis to inferior pubic ramus, 248f T4, with tumor extension to right pubic bone, 249f total penectomy, appearance following, 251f–252f treatment, 236 options by stage, 236–237, 237t
Penis, normal anatomy, 239f Perineal body, 16 Perineum, 20–21 Peritoneal reflections, 16 PET-CT. See Positron emission tomographycomputed tomography (PET-CT) Piriformis, 16 Polycystic ovary disease, 110f Positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT), 101 in rectal cancer, 156 Posterior pelvic clearance, 288, 295f. See also Pelvic clearance (exenteration) Postmenopausal ovaries, 103f Preprostatic urethra, 17 Presacral fascia, 16 Pre-sacral lymph node metastases cervical cancer, 53f Prevesical space, 16 Primary tumors, in rectum, 155 Proliferative phase, 18 PROPELLER, 4 Prostate anatomy, 17–18 MR appearance, 18, 25f, 34f normal anatomy, 223f zonal anatomy, 18, 32f, 34f Prostate cancer, 220–235 epidemiology, 220 fibromuscular bands, 234f hemorrhage, post biopsy, 234f histopathology, 220 1 H spectroscopic chemical shift imaging of, 14f imaging protocols, 6t lymph node involvement in, 267f MRI of, 221–235 imaging features, 222 indications, 221–222 pitfalls, 222 technique, 221 patterns of tumor spread, 220 post-brachytherapy implantation, 233f prognostic indicators, 220 prostatitis, 234f residual/recurrent disease post prostatectomy, 228f post radiotherapy, 228f tumor, 229f sclerotic bone metastases in, 276f seminal vesicle invasion, false positive, 235f staging accuracy, 222 T2a, 224f T2b, 224f T2c, 224f T3a, 224f, 225f T3a/T4, 226f T3b, 225f–226f T4, 227f, 228f N1, 230f, 231f M1a, 231f M1b, 232f M1c, 232f–233f treatment, 220–221 Prostatectomy, radical for prostate cancer, 220, 228f Prostatic urethra, 17 Prostatic utricle, 17 Prostatic venous plexus, 18 Prostatitis, 234f Pubocervical ligaments, 16 Pubococcygeus, 16 Puboprostatic ligaments, 16 Puborectalis, 16 Pubovesical ligaments, 16 Pudendal nerve, 22
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INDEX Racial difference in bladder cancer, 201 Radiotherapy for anal cancer, 179–180 for bladder cancer, 202, 203 for cervical cancer, 39–40 for endometrial cancer, 78 for ovarian cancer, 99 for prostate cancer, 221, 228f for rectal cancer, 154 appearances following, 155–156, 171f–172f for vaginal cancer, 118 for vulval cancer, 136 Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve prostate cancer and, 222 Rectal anastomotic dehiscence, pelvic sepsis due to, 176f Rectal cancer, 152–176 APR, appearances following in females, 170f–171f in males, 169f–170f bone metastases from, 274f chemotherapy, 154 diffusion-weighted imaging for, 154 epidemiology, 152 histopathology, 152 imaging features, 155 hematogenous spread, 155 lymph node disease, 155 primary tumor, 155 synchronous tumors, 155 imaging protocols, 6t lymph node metastasis, advanced local, 167f mesorectal lymph node, enlarged benign, 166f MRI of, 154–176 indications, 154 technique, 154 patterns of tumor spread, 152–153 pitfalls of MRI, 156–157 adjacent visceral infiltration, 156 hemorrhoids, 156, 176f intussuscepted tumor, 156, 168f Linitis plastica, 156–157, 169f nodal disease, 156 partial volume artifact, overstaging due to, 156 peritumoral fibrosis, overstaging due to, 156 tumor identification on planning T2-weighted sagittal view, 156 post radiotherapy appearances, 155–156, 171f–172f post-surgical appearances, 155 prognostic indicators, 153–154 protective factors against, 152 radiotherapy, 154 rectal anastomotic dehiscence, pelvic sepsis due to, 176f recurrence, 298f, 309f–310f residual/recurrent disease, 156, 173f Hartman’s procedure, 173f–174f mucinous tumor involving cervix and left pelvic sidewall, 175f previous anterior resection, 174f–175f staging accuracy, 154–155 modified Dukes’ and TNM systems for, 153t T-staging of, schematic diagram, 157f T1, 158f T2, 159f T3, contrasted against peritumoral fibrosis, 162f
[Rectal cancer staging] T3 lower, 160f T3 mid-third, 159f T3 mid, with mesorectal involvement, 161f T3 mucinous lower, 160f T3/T4 lower, abutting right levator ani muscle, 163f T3 with EMVI, 161f T4 lower, infiltrating prostate gland, 165f–166f T4a mid- and upper, with peritoneal infiltration, 162f T4b lower, infiltrating levator ani muscle, 164f T4b lower, infiltrating vagina, 163f T4b mid, infiltrating left sacral foramen and posterior bladder wall, 165f T4b mucinous lower, infiltrating anus and vagina, 164f N1, 167f N2, 167f TNM system for, 153t surgery, 154 treatment, 154 T1-weighted images for, 154 T2-weighted images for, 154 Rectovaginal septum, 16 Rectovesical space, 16 Rectum abdominoperineal TME, lateral view from, 158f anatomy, 19–20 MR appearance, 20 normal, 157f Residual/recurrent tumor, MR imaging accuracy in, 290 anal cancer, 180 following chemoradiotherapy, 198f following chemoradiotherapy and abdominoperineal resection, 197f following total pelvic clearance, 199f–200f anterior abdominal wall involvement, 302f bladder cancer, 203, 217f bladder involvement, 292f, 298f, 301f in cervical cancer, 41, 69f, 71f, 292f, 301f in endometrial cancer, 79 overview, 288 pelvic clearance, 288–290, 291f–314f (See also Pelvic clearance (exenteration)) pelvic mass diffusion-weighted imaging in, 310f–312f floor involvement, 298f, 299f involving external iliac vessels, 303f sidewall involvement, 304f visceral involvement, 309f penile cancer, 238, 250f–257f pitfalls, 290 post radiotherapy, 291f prostate bed, recurrence, after radical prostatectomy., 293f prostate cancer post prostatectomy, 228f post radiotherapy, 228f tumor, 229f rectal cancer, 156, 173f Hartman’s procedure, 173f–174f mucinous tumor involving cervix and left pelvic sidewall, 175f previous anterior resection, 174f–175f rectal involvement, 298f, 309f–310f sacral involvement, 299f, 305f, 307f, 308f, 314f sacral nerve root involvement, 305f–307f, 308f sciatic nerve involvement, 307f, 308f
319
[Residual/recurrent tumor, MR imaging] seminal vesicle involvement, 298f, 299f sigmoid colon involvement, 297f, 301f small bowel sarcoma, 301f technique, 289–290 vaginal involvement, 300f, 301f vascular pelvic tumor, 304f vulval cancer, 137, 147f–150f Retroperitoneal metastases, 191f Retropubic space, 17 Rigid sigmoidoscopy, 1 Sacral insufficiency fractures bone metastases pitfall, 278f Sacral lymph nodes, 21, 259 Sacral plexus, 22 Sacrogenital ligaments, 16 Satellite nodules, defined, 153 SCC. See Squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) Sciatic nerve, 22 Sclerotic bone metastases in prostatic carcinoma, 276f Secretory phase, 18 Seminal colliculus (verumontanum), 17 Seminal vesicles anatomy, 18 MR appearance, 18, 32f–33f Sex cord stromal tumors, 97, 98t Short tau inversion recovery (STIR) sequence lymph node assessment, 260, 264f–265f Sigmoid colon cancer recurrence, 297f Signal-intensity time curves, 7, 12f Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), 97 Small bowel sarcoma recurrence, 301f Smoking, bladder cancers and, 201 SNP. See Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) Soft tissue metastases, 263, 286f Spermatic cord, 18 Sphincter vaginae, 16 SPIO. See Superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) contrast Squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) anal canal and, 178 penile, 236 Stage migration (stage shift), 2 Staging, tumor, 1 classification systems, 1–2 STIR. See Short tau inversion recovery (STIR) sequence Subchondral cyst bone metastases pitfall, 281f Superficial transverse perineal muscle, 20 Superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) contrast lymph node assessment, 260 Synchronous tumors, in rectum, 155 Three-Tesla systems, 3 TME. See Total mesorectal excision (TME) 1.5-T MR scanners, 3 TNM. See Tumor Node Metastasis (TNM) classification Total mesorectal excision (TME), 19–20 for rectal cancer, 154 Total pelvic clearance, 288, 296f, 313f–314f. See also Pelvic clearance (exenteration) Transversalis fascia, 16 Transverse perineal, 16 True pelvic cavity, 16 Tumor diagnosis, 1, 2 Tumor markers ovarian cancer, 99
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320
INDEX
Tumor Node Metastasis (TNM) classification, 2 anal cancer, 178, 179t bladder cancer, 202t cervical cancer, 38, 39t endometrial cancer, 77, 78t lymphatic tumor, 259 ovarian cancer, 100t penile cancer, 237t prostate cancer, 221t rectal cancer, 153t vulval cancer, 135, 136t Tumor recurrence, 288, 290, 292f–293f, 297f. See also Residual/recurrent tumor, MR imaging accuracy of MRI in, 290 Tumor staging systems, 1–2 T1-weighted images (T1WI) lymph node assessment, 260 for rectal cancer, 154 T2-weighted images (T2WI) lymph node assessment, 260 for rectal cancer, 154 T1WI. See T1-weighted images (T1WI) T2WI. See T2-weighted images (T2WI) T2W sequences (fast or turbo spin echo), 4 coronal oblique plane, 10f sagittal plane, 9f–10f transaxial oblique plane, 9f–10f transaxial plane, 8f T1W sequences (spin echo or gradient echo), 3–4 coronal plane, 4, 8f transaxial plane, 4, 8f UICC. See International Union against Cancer (UICC) UKCCCR. See United Kingdom Co-ordinating Committee on Cancer Research (UKCCCR) U.K. National Bowel Cancer Screening Programme, 152 Ultrasmall paramagnetic iron oxide (USPIO) MRI with, 155 Umbilical ligaments, 16 Umbilicovesical fascia, 16 United Kingdom Co-ordinating Committee on Cancer Research (UKCCCR), 180 Urachal cancer, 216f Urachus, 16 Ureter anatomy, 17 bladder cancer with tumor extending into, 215f MR appearance, 17 Urethra anatomy, 17 male, 17 MR appearance, 17, 25f–26f, 30f Urethral crest, 17 Urethropelvic ligaments, 16 Urinary bladder. See Bladder, urinary Urogenital triangle anatomy, 20–21 MR appearance, 21 USPIO. See Ultrasmall paramagnetic iron oxide (USPIO)
Uterine tubes anatomy, 18–19 MR appearance, 19 Uterus anatomy, 18–19 MR appearance, 19 zonal anatomy, normal, 80f Vagina anatomy, 18 cervical cancer radiotherapy after, 129f upper mimicking outer cervical stroma, 59f MR appearance, 18, 24f–25f normal, 120f Vaginal cancer, 118–133 chemoradiotherapy, 118 epidemiology, 118 FIGO classification system, 120, 121t histopathology, 118 imaging protocols, 6t MRI of imaging features, 119 indications, 119–120 pitfalls, 120 technique, 119 patterns of tumor spread, 118 post-radiotherapy, 119, 120 cervical cancer and, 129f vaginal stenosis and hematocolpos, 130f post-surgery, 119 prognostic indicators, 118 radiotherapy, 118 recurrence, 300f staging accuracy, 119 T1 N0, 121f T2 N0, 121f T2 N0, with early tumor progression following chemoradiotherapy, 132f T2 N0, with ureteric obstruction/adherence to the posterior bladder wall, 123f T2 N1, 122f T2 N1, with posterior pelvic lymph node metastases, 122f T3 N0, involving bladder and bowel muscle layers, with good response to radiotherapy, 123f–124f T3 N0, involving perineal body, 125f T3 N0, involving the urethra and perineal body, 125f T3 N0, with partial response following chemoradiotherapy, 131f T3 N1, invading perineal structures, 124f T4, vesicovaginal fistula and recurrenttumor following radiotherapy for, 133f T4 N0, invading ischioanal fossa, 128f T4 N0, involving bladder, rectum, and pelvic floor, 128f T4 N0, involving bladder muscle layer, rectum and sigmoid colon, 126f T4 N0, involving posterior bladder wall, 126f T4 N1, involving sigmoid colon and with multiple perirectal nodes, 127f T4 N1, with rectovaginal fistula, 129f surgery, 118 treatment, 118
Vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia (VAIN), 118 Vaginal venous plexus, 18, 30f VAIN. See Vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia (VAIN) Valves of Houston, 19 Vas deferens, 18 Veins anatomy, 21 MR appearance, 21 Venous plexuses, 21 Vertebral metastasis, 275f Vestibule, 20 VIN. See Vulval intraepithelial neoplasia (VIN) Visceral fascia, 16 Visceral ligaments, 16 Visceral metastases, pelvic, 263, 285f–286f from malignant melanoma, 285f Vulva, 20 normal anatomy, 137f Vulval cancer, 135–150 chemotherapy, 136 epidemiology, 135 histopathology, 135 and HPV, 135 imaging features, 137 lymph node disease, 137, 144f–147f primary tumor, 137, 137f–143f residual/recurrent disease, 137, 147f–150f imaging protocols, 6t MRI of, 136–150 indications, 136 pitfalls, 137 technique, 136 patterns of tumor spread, 135 prognostic indicators, 135 radiotherapy, 136 residual/recurrent disease, 147f–150f staging accuracy, 136–137 inguinal lymph node pitfall, 150f T1a, 138f T1b, anterior tumor, 139f, 140f T1b, central tumor, 140f T1b posterior, 139f T2 N2c, inguinal lymph node metastases in tumor with urethral involvement, 146f T2, perineal and urethral involvement, 141f T2, posterior tumor involving anal canal, lower vagina, and urethra, 141f T3, involving mid-third vagina, 142f T3, involving vagina and rectum, 143f N1, 144f N2, locally invasive tumor involving anal canal with inguinal lymph node metastases, 145f N2c, 144f N2c M1, with inguinal and pelvic lymph node metastases, 146f N2 M1, with para-aortic lymph node metastases, 147f surgery, 135 TNM and FIGO classification, 135, 136t treatment, 135 Vulval intraepithelial neoplasia (VIN), 135
Second Edition
About the editors
Pelvic cancers usually require MR imaging and the revised and updated MRI Manual of Pelvic Cancer Second Edition contains chapters covering all the major pelvic cancers. There are also chapters dealing with basic pelvic anatomy, staging, and imaging techniques. The use of advanced MR techniques such as diffusion weighted imaging, dynamic contrast enhancement, and magnetic resonance spectroscopy is integrated appropriately.
Soo Y. S. K. Mak MBChB, MRCP(UK), FRCR is a Consultant Radiologist at The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK. She is an oncological radiologist specializing in cross-sectional imaging and PET CT.
The extensive use of high quality MR images makes this book an invaluable bench reference for all those required to be familiar with or report MRI pelvic cancer examinations. New to the Second Edition: • new imaging techniques as applicable to a number of pelvic cancers including cervical, endometrial, ovarian, and vaginal cancer • imaging findings post chemoradiation for cervical, rectal, bladder, and anal cancer • imaging findings in brachytherapy for prostate cancer • new penile cancer chapter A highly useful resource, this guide: • presents a comprehensive set of top-quality images of pelvic cancers • introduces pelvic cancer staging, MRI technique, and pelvic anatomy • provides a short account of each disease and a set of images demonstrating the tumor, node, and metastasis stages • contains illustrations of recurrent disease and appearances following chemoradiotherapy • discusses imaging before exenterative surgery and the imaging of metastatic disease within the pelvis
Bernadette M. Carrington MBChB, MRCP(UK), FRCR is a Consultant Radiologist at The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK and an Honorary Lecturer at the University of Manchester UK. She has vast oncology cross-sectional and PET CT experience and has written widely on oncology imaging topics.
Second Edition
• has a consistent format with the extensive use of high quality MR images of pelvic cancer to aid diagnosis
Paul A. Hulse B.Med.Sci. (Hons), BMBS, MRCP(UK), FRCR is a Consultant Radiologist at The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK. Dr Hulse is an experienced oncoradiologist specializing in cross-sectional and PET CT imaging.
MRI Manual of Pelvic Cancer
About the book
Mak Hulse Carrington
MRI Manual of Pelvic Cancer
MRI Manual of Pelvic Cancer Second Edition
Edited by
Soo Y. S. K. Mak Paul A. Hulse Bernadette M. Carrington