| Literature DB >> 29492599 |
Rahel A Kubik-Huch1, Michael Weston2, Stephanie Nougaret3,4, Henrik Leonhardt5, Isabelle Thomassin-Naggara6, Mariana Horta7, Teresa Margarida Cunha7, Cristina Maciel8, Andrea Rockall9,10, Rosemarie Forstner11.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The aim of the Female Pelvic Imaging Working Group of the European Society of Urogenital Radiology (ESUR) was to develop imaging guidelines for MR work-up in patients with known or suspected uterine leiomyomas.Entities:
Keywords: Genital diseases female; Guideline; Leiomyoma; Magnetic resonance imaging; Uterus
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29492599 PMCID: PMC6028852 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-017-5157-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 5.315
Patient Preparation
| • Scheduling the exam according to the menstrual cycle is not necessary |
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Proposed MR imaging protocol
| MR BASIC PROTOCOL |
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| At least two T2W orthogonal oblique planes of the uterus, e.g. sagittal T2W sequence of the corpus of the uterus; Axial oblique T2W sequence of the corpus of the uterus |
| SPECIFIC CLINICAL SETTINGS |
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MR imaging sequences and rationale
| Sequences/technique | Diagnostic value | Literature |
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| 7,10,12,13,16 | |
| Sag/Oblique axial T2W and T1W axial | Anatomy, characterisation and mapping of leiomyomas | |
| Fast T2W | Large tumors, renal obstruction, metastases | |
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| T1W FS | DDx of fatty from hemorrhagic lesions of the uterus (e.g lipoleiomyomas, leiomyomas with haemorrhagic degeneration or haematometra) and the ovaries (teratoma, endometriomas) | 10,13,16,17 |
| Oblique coronal T2W | Relationship to uterine cavity, DDx of uterine (claw sign) and ovarian origin | 3,10 |
| Gadolinium T1W (optimally DCE) | Characterisation of leiomyomas | 12,13, 17-23, |
| DWI | Characterisation in atypical leiomyomas; treatment in leiomyoma embolisation | 11, 28-37 |
Fig. 1Different aspects of leiomyoma degeneration: Hemorrhagic degeneration after UFE. Axial T1-weighted fat saturated images, before (a) and after gadolinium administration (b) show a leiomyoma with increased signal on T1 and lack of enhancement, consistent with hemorrhagic degeneration. Cystic degeneration. Sagittal T2-weighted (c) and axial T1-weighted fat saturated contrast enhanced (d) images show a leiomyoma presenting a peripheral area with high T2 intensity signal and no enhancement, consistent with cystic degeneration (arrows). Myxoid degeneration. Sagittal T2-weighted (e) and T1-weighted fat saturated contrast enhanced (f) images show a leiomyoma presenting areas with high T2 intensity signal and enhancement after gadolinium administration (in contrast with the cystic degeneration), suggesting myxoid degeneration (arrows)
Differentiation between leiomyoma and leiomyosarcoma
| Leiomyoma | Leiomyosarcoma | |
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| Premenopausal | Peri/postmenopausal |
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| Well delineated | Often |
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| Variable | Restricted diffusion, low ADC |
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| No | Adjacent tissues |
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| Commonly multiple | Solitary |
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| Variable | Large (>10cm) |
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| Mostly low, high in degeneration, whorled pattern | Inhomogenous with areas of |
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| Variable; often parallels myometrium, cellular types with avid enhancement | Hypervascularization; peripheral early enhancement, central |
* ≥3 of *features: 95% specificity in predicting leiomyosarcoma according to Lakhman and al (features are highlighted in bold) (26)
Fig. 2Ovarian artery parasitation. 3D reconstructed MRA image depicts an enlarged left ovarian artery (arrow) extending from the aorta to the pelvic midline, where a bulky leiomyoma is located, apparently contributing to the leiomyoma supply. Note the typical corkscrew appearance of the ovarian artery. The right ovarian artery is not seen as the normal caliber ovarian arteries are too small to be depicted by this imaging modality
Fig. 3Leiomyomas and DWI. Oblique-axial T2-weighted (a) and b=800 diffusion-weighted (b) MR images and apparent diffusion coefficient map (c) of pelvis show multiple uterine leiomyomas (white arrows) that are hypointense in all three sequences, the so-called T2 blackout effect. (d) Axial T2-weighted MR image shows a heterogeneous hyperintense lesion (white arrow). (e) Axial diffusion-weighted MR image at b=800 shows large areas of increased signal intensity (white arrow) in mass. (f) Apparent diffusion coefficient map shows restriction (white arrow). The measured ADC is 0.7. Histopathologic examination confirmed the diagnosis of leiomyosarcoma. (g) Oblique axial T2-weighted MR image shows a well-defined lesion (white arrow) of intermediate to high signal intensity. (h) and (i), Oblique-axial diffusion-weighted image (b=800) shows high signal intensity (white arrow) and restriction on the corresponding ADC map (white arrow), with a measured ADC of 1.25. Histopathologic result was cellular leiomyoma
Proposed leiomyoma reporting template
A standard template report dedicated to uterine leiomyomas MR imaging is proposed by the Female Imaging Working Group, listing the relevant items to mention in the report. The main differential diagnosis and the diagnostic clues are illustrated
(LM – leiomyomas)
In case of multiplicity, evaluation should be performed on a per-patient basis: only atypical ones should be described. If there is no atypical leiomyoma, the largest leiomyoma should be measured
The FIGO classification is reported on the drawing (FIGO 0: pedunculated intracavitary; FIGO 1: <50 % intramural; FIGO 2: ≧ 50% intramural; FIGO 3: contacts endometrium, 100 % intramural; FIGO 4: intramural; FIGO 5: subserosal ≧ 50% intramural; FIGO 6: subserosal <50 % intramural; FIGO 7: subserosal pedunculated; FIGO 8: other (specify eg, cervical, parasitic)
Differentiation between leiomyoma and ovarian fibroma, adenomyoma and leiomyosarcoma are also highlighted
Fig. 4Leiomyoma FIGO classification according to LM location: (a) Axial oblique T2-weighted image showing a subserosal leiomyoma being less than 50% intramural (MRI FIGO 6) (white arrow). Note the bridging vessels feeding the lesion (black arrow). (b) Sagittal T2-weighted image showing an intramural leiomyoma (MRI FIGO 4). (c) Axial oblique T2-weighted image shows a submucosal leiomyoma being less than 50% intramural (MRI FIGO 1)
Fig. 5Sagittal and axial T2-weighted images showing a pedunculated subserosal leiomyoma (MRI FIGO 7) within the pouch of Douglas (black arrow). The bridging vessels sign confirms the uterine origin of the mass (white arrow)
Fig. 6Differences between leiomyomas and adenomyoma/adenomyosis. (a) Sagittal T2W image shows a poorly defined border, oval-shaped, low-signal mass (white arrow) with hyperintense T2 foci embedded in the lesion (black arrow), consistent with an adenomyoma. (b) Axial oblique T2W image demonstrates an ill-defined thickening of the junctional zone with hyperintense T2 foci, consistent with adenomyosis (white arrow). Nearby there is a T2 hypointense lesion, with a well-defined margin in keeping with an intramural leiomyoma (black arrow). Notice the thin T2 hyperintense rim surrounding the lesion, indicating a pseudocapsule of edema secondary to some degree of venous or lymphatic obstruction, typical for leiomyomas (arrowhead). Coexistence of adenomyosis and leiomyomas is not rare