| Literature DB >> 28852316 |
Christoph F Dietrich1, Yi Dong1, Christian Jenssen1, Valentina Ciaravino1, Michael Hocke1, Wen-Ping Wang1, Eike Burmester1, Kathleen Moeller1, Nathan Ss Atkinson1, Paola Capelli1, Mirko D'Onofrio1.
Abstract
AIM: To describe the imaging features of serous neoplasms of the pancreas using ultrasound, endoscopic ultrasound, computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Elastography; Endoscopic ultrasound; Guideline; Ultrasound
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28852316 PMCID: PMC5558120 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v23.i30.5567
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Baseline characteristics of serous pancreatic neoplasia patients
| Age (yr) | |
| mean ± SD | 57.3 ± 14.2 |
| Range | 18-85 |
| Female/Male | 229/58 |
| Symptoms | |
| Pancreatitis | 5 |
| Weight loss | 9 |
| Anemia | 1 |
| Incidental finding | 272 |
| Histological results | |
| Surgery | 249 |
| EUS FNA (22G) | 31 |
| TUS-Bx (18 G) | 7 |
SPN: Serous pancreatic neoplasia; EUS: Endoscopic ultrasound; FNA: Fine needle aspiration; TUS-Bx: Transabdominal biopsy.
Conventional B mode ultrasound findings of serous pancreatic neoplasia n (%)
| Location | |
| Head/neck | 113 (39.3) |
| Body | 89 (31.0) |
| Tail | 85 (29.6) |
| Size of lesions (mm) | |
| mean ± SD | 38.7 ± 26.2 |
| Range | 4-160 |
| Number of lesions | |
| Single | 281 (97.9) |
| Multiple | 6 (2.1) |
| B mode aspect | |
| Microcystic mix | 31 (10.8) |
| Macrocystic | 96 (33.4) |
| Solid and cystic | 133 (46.3) |
| Solid | 27 (9.4) |
| B mode echogenicity | |
| Anechoic | 10 (3.4) |
| Hypoechoic | 271 (94.4) |
| Hyperechoic | 6 (2.2) |
| CDI vessel detectable | |
| Avascular | 228 (79.4) |
| Macrovessels detectable | 59 (20.6) |
| CDI vascular pattern ( | |
| Central artery | 26 (44.1) |
| Typical spoke wheel appearance | 21 (35.6) |
| No specifics | 12 (20.3) |
SPN: Serous pancreatic neoplasia; CDI: Color Doppler imaging.
Contrast enhanced ultrasound imaging features of serous pancreatic neoplasia lesions n (%)
| Arterial phase | |
| Hyperenhancement | 63 (36.5) |
| Isoenhancement | 107 (61.8) |
| Hypoenhancement | 3 (1.7) |
| Late phase | |
| Hyperenhancement | 39 (22.5) |
| Isoenhancement | 129 (74.6) |
| Hypoenhancement | 5 (2.9) |
CEUS: Contrast enhanced ultrasound; SPN: Serous pancreatic neoplasia.
Endoscopic ultrasound and contrast enhanced endoscopic ultrasound imaging features of serous pancreatic neoplasia lesions n (%)
| EUS | |
| Anechoic | 2 (3.3) |
| Hypoechoic | 56 (91.8) |
| Isoechoic | 3 (4.9) |
| EUS-CDI vessel detectable | |
| Avascular | 0 |
| Macrovessels detectable | 61 (100) |
| EUS-CDI vascular pattern ( | |
| Central artery | 26 (42.6) |
| Typical spoke wheel appearance | 15 (24.6) |
| No specifics | 20 (32.8) |
| CE-EUS ( | |
| Hyperenhancement | 54 (100) |
| Isoenhancement | 0 |
| Hypoenhancement | 0 |
| Final EUS-Diagnosis | |
| “Eyecatcher” | 49 (80.3) |
| Typical SCA | 5 (8.2) |
| Unclear macrocyst | 6 (9.8) |
EUS: Endoscopic ultrasound; EUS-CDI: Endoscopic ultrasound color Doppler Imaging; CE-EUS: Contrast enhanced endoscopic ultrasound; SPN: Serous pancreatic neoplasia; SCA: Serous cystadenoma.
Figure 1Macro- and micro-pathology (histology, cytology) of microcystic pancreatic adenoma. A: Typical microcystic appearance of serous cystadenoma with “honeycomb” architecture, and central scar with small calcification; B: Histology demonstrates the typical single layer of clear cuboidal epithelial cells lining the cysts.
Figure 2Typical microcystic serous pancreatic neoplasia using colour Doppler imaging. Note the centrally located artery.
Figure 3Typical microcystic serous pancreatic neoplasia using B-mode (A), colour Doppler imaging (B), and contrast enhanced ultrasound (C and D). Note the centrally located artery and the typical hyperenhancement.
Figure 4Typical oligocystic serous pancreatic neoplasia using endoscopic ultrasound.
Figure 5Histopathologically proven serous microcystic serous pancreatic neoplasia. A: A solid-cystic lesion was detected in the head of pancreas with B-mode ultrasound; B: Multiple interlesional color flow signals were detected using colour Doppler imaging; C: Contrast enhanced ultrasound showed the lesion to hyperenhance in the arterial phase; D: Isoenhance in the late phase; E and F: Surgical pathology shows the typical honeycomb structure.
Figure 6Pseudo-solid serous pancreatic neoplasia, histologically demonstrated to have a microcystic structure. A: B-mode ultrasound shows a solid hypoecoic mass in the neck of the pancreas; B: Contrast enhanced ultrasound shows the lesion to hyperenhance with a hypoechoic defect in the center; C: Computed tomography shows the lesion as solid and inhomogeneously hyperenhancing.
Figure 7Large pseudosolid serous pancreatic neoplasia. A: With B-mode ultrasound a huge mass is visible appearing solid and inhomogeneously hypoechoic; B: Doppler shows large arterial vessels within the mass; C: With Computed tomography the lesion appears pseudosolid with inhomogeneous slight enhancement; D: Magnetic resonance imaging clearly shows the cystic nature of the mass with microcystic appearance.
Figure 8Unilocular serous pancreatic neoplasia. A: B-mode ultrasound shows a cyst in the body of the pancreas; B: Magnetic resonance imaging shows small cystic lesions in the body of the pancreas not communicating with the main pancreatic duct.