| Literature DB >> 29675627 |
Andrea Delli Pizzi1, Raffaella Basilico2, Roberta Cianci2, Barbara Seccia2, Mauro Timpani2, Alessandra Tavoletta2, Daniele Caposiena2, Barbara Faricelli2, Daniela Gabrielli2, Massimo Caulo3.
Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) allows to non-invasively evaluate rectal cancer staging and to assess the presence of "prognostic signs" such as the distance from the anorectal junction, the mesorectal fascia infiltration and the extramural vascular invasion. Moreover, MRI plays a crucial role in the assessment of treatment response after chemo-radiation therapy, especially considering the growing interest in the new conservative policy (wait and see, minimally invasive surgery). We present a practical overview regarding the state of the art of the MRI protocol, the main signs that radiologists should consider for their reports during their clinical activity and future perspectives. TEACHING POINTS: • MRI protocol for rectal cancer staging and re-staging. • MRI findings that radiologists should consider for reports during everyday clinical activity. • Perspectives regarding the development of latest technologies.Entities:
Keywords: Chemo-radiation treatment response; Complete responders; Diffusion-weighted imaging; Locally advanced rectal cancer; Magnetic resonance imaging
Year: 2018 PMID: 29675627 PMCID: PMC6108973 DOI: 10.1007/s13244-018-0606-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insights Imaging ISSN: 1869-4101
Main updated imaging interpretation and reporting recommendations by 2016 ESGAR consensus meeting
| • T3 and T4 substages should be reported (T3a, b, c, d and T4a, b) |
| • Structured report including the circumferential location of the tumour |
| • Nodal staging and restaging (according to short axis and morphological criteria concerning shape, border and signal) |
| • Presence of EMVI (increased risk of tumour recurrence and impaired overall survival) |
| • Sphincter invasion, involvement of MRF, pelvic wall/floor (T4), peritoneal reflection (T4) |
MRI protocol and diagnostic elements for rectal cancer that radiologists should consider in their clinical activity and report
| MR Protocol | MRI Staging | MRI Restaging |
|---|---|---|
| ✓ T2-weighted axial perpendicular to the main tumour axis (slice thickness ≤3 mm) | ✓ site (low, middle, high rectum) of the tumour (circumferential location) | ✓ same criteria used for the MR staging regarding T |
Main topic of research and future perspectives
| • Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI, intravoxel incoherent motion) |
| • Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging |
| • Positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) |
| • Imaging integration (PET/CT, DCE-MRI, DWI) |
| • Radiomics |
| • Deep learning and automatic segmentation tool |