| Literature DB >> 29559763 |
Inês Alves1, Teresa Margarida Cunha2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether there are substantive differences between the initial interpretations of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans acquired at outside facilities and the second-opinion interpretations of radiologists specializing in gynecologic oncology at a tertiary cancer center, among patients referred for endometrial cancer staging.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostic imaging; Endometrial neoplasm/diagnostic imaging; Magnetic resonance imaging; Referral and consultation; Tertiary care centers
Year: 2018 PMID: 29559763 PMCID: PMC5846322 DOI: 10.1590/0100-3984.2016.0171
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Bras ISSN: 0100-3984
Figure 1Flow chart of the study design.
Revised (2009) International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics Staging System for Endometrial Cancer.
| Stage | Finding(s) |
|---|---|
| I | Tumor confined to the corpus uteri |
| IA | No invasion or invasion of less than half of the myometrium |
| IB | Invasion of half or more than half of the myometrium |
| II | Tumor invading the cervical stroma but not
extending beyond the uterus[ |
| III | Local and/or regional spread of the tumor |
| IIIA | Tumor invading the serosa of the corpus uteri
and/or adnexa[ |
| IIIB | Vaginal and/or parametrial involvement[ |
| IIIC | Metastases to pelvic and/or para-aortic lymph
nodes[ |
| IIIC1 | Positive pelvic lymph nodes |
| IIIC2 | Positive para-aortic lymph nodes with or without positive pelvic lymph nodes |
| IV | Tumor invading the bladder and/or bowel mucosa, with or with-out distant metastases |
| IVA | Tumor invading the bladder and/or bowel mucosa |
| IVB | Distant metastases, including intra-abdominal metastases and/ or inguinal lymph nodes |
G1, G2, or G3.
Endocervical glandular involvement only should now be considered indicative of stage I rather than stage II.
Positive cytology should be reported separately and does not alter the stage.
Figure 2MRI scan from an outside facility showing the pelvis of a 63-year-old female with endometrial cancer. Gadolinium-enhanced fat-suppressed sagittal T1-weighted images show cancer invading more than half of the myometrium (A) and the cervical stroma (B). The initial report described an endometrial tumor invading less than half of the myometrium. Subsequent histopathology confirmed the findings of the second-opinion interpretation.
Figure 3Axial T2-weighted image (A) and gadolinium-enhanced fat-suppressed sagittal T1-weighted image (B) from an outside facility. Neither the enlargement of the left external iliac lymph node nor the invasion of the upper posterior third of the vagina was reported in the initial interpretation of the MRI scans of this patient with endometrial cancer invading more than half of the myometrium and the cervical stroma. Although those findings led to preoperative upstaging, the decision made by the multidisciplinary board was that radiotherapy would have been the first approach to treatment in either case. Therefore, the second-opinion report did not affect the management in this particular case.