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SOLITARY PULMONARY NODULE
Dr.Santosh Atreya
Phase-B Resident
Department of Radiology & Imaging
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A solitary pulmonary nodule, according to the -
Nomenclature Committee of the Fleischner Society,is
defined as a discrete, well-marginated, nearly circular
opacity less than or equal to 3 cm in diameter that is
completely surrounded by lung Parenchyma.
Does not touch the hilum or mediastinum, and is without
associated atelectasis or pleural effusion.
Definition
• Most solitary pulmonary nodules are benign. However, they
may represent an early stage of lung cancer. Lung cancer is
the leading cause of cancer death in the United States,
accounting for more deaths annually than breast, colon, and
prostate cancers combined.
• Over 1 million nodules are detected each year as an incidental
finding, either on chest radiographs or thoracic computed
tomography (CT) scans.
• 40% of solitary pulmonary nodules are malignant, with other
common lesions being granulomas & benign tumours.
Classification
Malignant: Primary nodule
Secondary nodule
Lymphoma
Plasmacytoma
Alveolar cell carcinoma
Benign: Hamartoma
Adenoma
Connective tissue tumours
Granuloma: Tuberculosis
Histoplasmosis
Paraffinoma
Sarcoidosis
Infection:
Round Pneumonia Pulmonary infarct
Pulmonary Haematoma
Collagen Diseases
Rheumatoid arthritis
Wegener’s granulomatosis
Abscess
Hydatid
Amoebic
Fungi
Parasites
Rounded atelectasis
Round pneumonia
Congenital:
Bronchogenic cyst
Pulmonary Sequestration
Congenital Bronchial atresia
AVM
Miscellaneous:
Impacted mucus
Amyloidosis
Intrapulmonary lymph node
Pleural:Fibroma, Tumour,
Loculated fluid
Non Pulmonary: Skin & chest wall
lesions, Artefact
Contd…
Size Interpretation
<3mm 99.8% Benign
4-7mm 99.1% Benign
8-20 mm 82% Benign
>20 mm 50% Benign
>30 mm 7% Benign
SPURIOUS LESIONS ON CXR
• Nipple shadow
• Pleural based lesions
• Chest wall lesions
• Skin nodules
• Artifacts due to clothing
• Screen artifacts
Benign granuloma and primary bronchogenic
carcinomas account for 80% of cases of SPN
Classic example of “hyposkilia” – the patient had
never been examined by physician.
This patient had
neurofibromatosis 1
This lady also came for a CT guided biopsy
of a left mid-zone lesion
Rib fracture callus
SPURIOUS LESIONS ON CXR
• Nipple shadow
• Pleural based lesions
• Chest wall lesions
• Skin nodules
• Artifacts due to clothing
• Screen artifacts
Benign granuloma and primary bronchogenic
carcinomas account for 80% of cases of SPN
IMAGING OF SPN
• CHEST RADIOGRAPH
• CT SCAN
• MRI
• FDG-PET / SPECT
How to detect SPN
Lesion ??
•
•
•
•
•
Pickup – Depends on the radiologist experience
Experience & Expertise
The “Ten-Thousand” hours rule
 High kV
Digital radiograph - these allow manipulation on a computer monitor
and a higher rate of detection
The principle holds that 10,000 hours of
"deliberate practice" are needed to
become world-class in any field.
• A nodule is assessed for its size,shape &
outline and for the presence of calcification
or cavitation.
• A search is made for associated abnormalities
such as bone destruction,effusions,lobar
collapse,septal lines & lymphadenopathy.
• Several radiologic characteristics found on CT
scanning and radiography may help to suggest
whether a lesion is benign or malignant. These
include the following:
• Size
• Shape
• Location
• Margin
• Doubling Time
• Internal characteristics
• HRCT is the most
sensitive and specific
for assessing the size,
shape, calcification and
margin of a nodule
MORPHOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF
SPN
1. SIZE
Size less than 10 mm : Difficult to appreciate
on a plain film & often appear as a
“Smudge” shadow rather than a mass.
But readily seen on CT.
2.SHAPE
CARCINOMAS : Irregular,Spiculated
or Notched margins.
Lobulation occurs in 25% of benign
nodules.
BENIGN :
ROUND/OVAL/SMOOTH
On occasions Infective Processes
have a round appearance which is
usually ill defined.
3.LOCATION:
Nodules that are attached to pleura, vessels, or fissures are
likely to be benign
• Central tumors: small cell carcinoma, squamous
cell carcinoma
• Peripheral tumors: adenocarcinoma, large cell carcinoma
• Metastasis usually basal and sub pleural
• Benign lesions are equally distributed throughout the lungs
4.MARGIN
• MALIGNANT :
irregular/spiculated/lobulated
( radial extension of the tumor cells along the lymphatics,
small airways or blood vessels)
• BENIGN : smooth/sharp
Metastases and carcinoid tumors have sharp, smooth
edges
21% of well defined nodules are malignant
Fine linear strands
extending 4-5 mm
outward
Spiculated on CXRs
84 – 90% are malignant
Corona radiata sign
Bronchogenic carcinoma. (A) Relatively
well-defined mass. (B) Ill-defined solitary
nodule.
She has a 2.2 cm sized nodule in the
right mid-zone
Next Steps
• A – Do nothing - old granuloma
• B – Aggressive - suspected
malignancy
• C – Give antibiotics or ATT
• D – Investigate further
Confirm intra-pulmonary
location
• A lateral film is often
necessary to confirm
that a lesion is
intrapulmonary before
investigating further.
This lesion is intra-pulmonary –
seen on both frontal and lateral
radiographs in the lung
• Typically an intrapulmonary
mass forms an acute angle
with the lung edge whereas,
extrapleural & mediastinal
masses form obtuse angles.
Extra Pleural Mass
• Name:Rokaya
Age: 60 Yrs
Address:Farid-
pur
C/O :Pain in
lower back for
3 years.
Recently she
developed
mild chest
pain.
Criteria for benignity
A - Calcification
B - Absence of enhancement
C - No Change in size for 18 months
Completely calcified -
benign
Engulfed calcific focus by a
malignant lesion
5.Doubling Time
• Volume doubling time is the time required for a lesion to double its
volume
• Malignant lesions : Doubling time of 1-6 months
• Benign lesions: Do not change their size for 18 months. such as
granuloma, hamartoma, bronchial carcinoid, and rounded atelectasis.
• In general, doubling times of less than 20 days suggest infections.
• An increase of 28% in nodule diameter indicates doubling
CT scan in an 80-year-old man: 2.5-cm
right upper lobe nodule at posterior
segment
Repeat CT scan 2 months later: Rapid
interval enlargement. Volumetric
doubling time was 35 days. FNAB
revealed mixed small cell and non–small
cell carcinoma.
A B C
April 06 June 08
Completely calcified and no
growth in 2 years -
benign
plain post-contrast
No enhancement whatsoever -
benign
May July
She shows a significant
increase in size over
2 ½ months
Plain Post-contrast
Contrast-enhanced study
shows
enhancement
Benign:
• Diffuse
• Central
• Popcorn
• Laminated
6.INTERNAL CHARACTERISTICS OF SPN
 Potentially Malignant
• Stippled
• Eccentric
Calcification Patterns
CENTRAL
CALCIFICATION
DIFFUSE,SOLID: GRANULOMA CONCENTRIC/TARGET
POPCORN CALCIFICATION
Eccentric dense calcification in
right lower lobe carcinoid
Amorphous calcification in non
small cell ca lung
• LESION WITH WALL THICKNESS
< 4 mm -LIKELY BENIGN
> 16 mm- LIKELY MALIGNANT
4-16 MM – INDETERMINATE
• IRREGULAR – LIKELY MALIGNANT
• THIN SMOOTH – LIKELY BENIGN
Cavitation
Malignant cavitation
• Air bronchograms and
pseudocavitation more commonly
malignant
• Desmoplastic reaction to the tumor
distorts the airway causing
narrowing and/or irregularity of
the small bronchi in relation to the
tumor
• Seen as cystic glandular spaces
within the mass
PSEUDOCAVITATION / AIR BRONCHOGRAMS
• Angioinvasive Pulmonary
Aspergillosis
• Blood clot in a cyst
• Complicated hydatid
disease
• Ca arising in a cyst
• Pulmonary gangrene
AIR CRESCENT SIGN
Early CT finding is a rim of
ground-glass opacity
surrounding the nodules (CT
halo sign).
Angioinvasive aspergillosis. CT section at the level of
the aortic arch shows two nodules with eccentric
Cavitation and “air crescent sign” . These findings in
this neutropenic patient are highly diagnostic of
angioinvasive aspergillosis.
Usually seen in benign lesions
like lung abscess, infected
cyst or cavity
AIR FLUID LEVEL
Name the sign??
Small nodules adjacent to larger
nodule or mass,predictor of benign
disease like granulomatous
diseases
Galaxy sign : satellite nodules in
sarcoidosis
Presence of satellite nodules in lung
tumors is considered as locally
advanced tumor
SATELLITE NODULES
Small pulmonary artery leading
directly to a nodule
Seen in AVF, hematogenous
metastasis, infarct
FEEDING VESSEL SIGN
• A pulmonary lesion that directly abuts,
narrows or occludes bronchial lumen is more
likely to be malignant
• Also seen in tuberculoma, pulmonary infarcts,
Inflammatory masses
• This sign helps in whether transbronchial or
trans thoracic biopsy helps in histological
diagnosis
POSITIVE BRONCHUS SIGN
POSITIVE BRONCHUS SIGN
Next steps
• A - Trial of therapy
• B - CT guided biopsy
• C - Bronchoscopy guided biopsy
• D - Lobectomy
CT – guided
biopsy
Tips during biopsy
• Biopsy not FNAC
• At least 5 cores
• Material for EGFR mutation studies
Gun-cannula technique – stylet in
cannula and gun
Foot pedal and in-room monitor allow accurate control along with
CT fluoroscopy
SPN
PA radiograph
BENIGN
Calcification
Lesion external or extra-
pulmonary
I
INDETERMINATE
Old X-rays
BENIGN
No change over 18
months
INDETERMINATE
CT scan / PET CT
BENIGN
No enhancement or
uptake ,Calcification
INDETERMINATE
BIOPSY
NOTE
• Risk of malignancy increases with age. For
individuals younger than 39 years, the risk is
3%. The risk increases to 15% for individuals
aged 40-49 years, to 43% for persons aged 50-
59 years, and to more than 50% for persons
older than 60 years.
Sometimes, some lesions are
characteristic
SOME COMMON BENIGN SPN
GRANULOMA
Commonest are Tuberculomas
Tuberculoma: more common in the upper
lobes & on the right side.
 Well defined ; 0.5-4 cm.25% are lobulated.
 Calcification frequent.
 80% have satellite lesions. Cavitation is
uncommon.
 Usually persists unchanged for years.
PULMONARY HAMARTOMA
• Benign pulmonary mass containing connective tissue ,
Cartilage , fat , smooth muscle , marrow , and bone
• Most common location – periphery of the lung
• X ray chest – spherical ,lobulated , well defined nodule
• Popcorn like calcification
• Fat density within the mass is a diagnostic feature
• ge > 40yrs (96%)
Central Lucencies :
• Fat
• 50 % contains fat & 30 % contains
calcium
The parenchymal lesion in this computed tomography (CT) scan
demonstrates low attenuation within the lesion, indicating the
presence of fat. Fat density is observed only in hamartoma and
lipoid pneumonia. The likely diagnosis is hamartoma
• X ray – well
circumscribed
lesion with
lobulated
outline
• CT - Feeding vessels and
draining vein can be
seen
• It can be confirmed on
CT
• PULMONARY
ANGIOGRAPHY RARELY
INDICATED
Lobulated,well marginated
nodule in the lower lobe
AVM
Feeding artery (arrow) and an enlarged
draining vein (arrowhead).
Simple pulmonary arteriovenous malformation. CT
scan at the level of the lung bases shows a well-defi ned,
smooth,
round nodule. Note:That the feeding vessel is about half the
diameter
of the fi stula.
Nidus of malformation
Pulmonary angiogram helps confirm
arteriovenous malformation. Note the early
draining vein (arrows)
ROUND PNEUMONIA
• Inflammatory pseudotumour
• Some times pneumonic
consolidation assumes a shape
And density similar to
pulmonary neoplasm
• Careful study reveals irregular
margin and air bronchogram
• Common in children
• May persists after recovery
from infection
VANISHING TUMOR
• Sharply marginated
collection of pleural fluid
contained either within
an interlobar pulmonary
fissure or in a subpleural
location adjacent to a
fissure
• Can occur on minor
fissure , oblique fissure
• Most of them are < 4 cms
BRONCHIAL CARCINOID
• Typical triad –
Well defined,round lobulated lesion
At the bifurcation
Eccentric calcification
account for up to 5% of lung cancers.
These tumors are generally small (3-4
cm or less) when diagnosed and occur
most commonly in persons under age
40.
Nodule with eccentric
calcifications (arrow) obstructing
the posterior segmental
bronchus of the right upper lobe.
High-resolution CT scan shows a
well-defined, round, partially
endobronchial nodule (arrow) in the
lateral subsegmental branch of the
anterior segmental bronchus of the
left upper lobe.
On a contrast-enhanced CT scan
(mediastinal windowing), the
nodule demonstrates marked
contrast enhancement and
mimics a vascular structure
On a contrast-enhanced CT scan
(mediastinal windowing), the
nodule demonstrates marked
contrast enhancement and mimics a
vascular structure
ROUND ATELECTASIS
• Chronic atelectasis that resembles mass-Pseudotumour
 Can be differentiated from malignancy using CT -
• Peripherily located , wedge shaped opacity
• Rounded or wedge shaped mass, forms an acute angle with adjacent thickened
pleura , commonly at lung base
• Crow feet / comet tail of vesssels sweeping into the margin of this opacity
• Air bronchogram visible in the centre portion of mass.
• Homogenous contrast enhancement of the atelectatic lung.
• Volume loss in the ipsilateral hemithorax.
• Conventional
tomographic scan of the
chest in a lateral
projection shows a large
subpleural mass
(arrowhead) in the right
lower lobe of the lung. A
curvilinear opacity
(arrow), the comet tail
sign, arises from the
inferior pole of the mass
and courses toward the
hilum.
CONTRAST ENHANCEMENT
- S/O• NODULE ENHANCEMENT < 15 HU
BENIGN LESION
• NODULE ENHANCEMENT > 15 HU – S/O
MALIGNANT LESION
• SENSITIVITY - 95 -100%
• SPECIFICITY -70 -93 %
When is CT needed??
 When CXR demonstrates
• Uncalcified nodule
• Nodule not stable for 18
months
• Failure of symptomatic
infiltrate to clear in 4-6
weeks.
Disadvantages of MRI
• Poor resolution
• Cardiac and respiratory motion artifacts
• Difficulty in detecting lesion < 1 cm lesion
• Not useful in peripheral SPN due to signal loss
PET SCAN
•
•
•
Highly valuable noninvasive tool
It is 95% sensitive for identifying malignancy and 85%
specific
False positive results may occur in lesions that
contain active inflammatory tissue (histoplasmomas)
ROLE OF FDG-PET
• Malignant cells have upregulated metabolisms and
proliferate rapidly.This results in marked uptake of
FDG
• False negative results due to - < 10 mm
• False positive results are due to –Active TB ,
Histoplasmosis , Rhematoid nodules ,Aspergillosis ,
wegeners granulomatosis
• Possibility of malignancy with negative FDG-PET is
<5%
Axial CT
Axial
PET
• TEXTBOOK OF RADIOLOGY AND IMAGING BY DAVID
SUTTON
• HAAGA
• CHAPMAN & NAKIELNY’S
• Evaluation of solitary pulmonary nodule : INDIAN
JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY
Bibliography
THANK YOU
6/4/2017 83

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Know "Solitary Pulmonary Nodule" in a simple way !! (Radiology)

  • 1. SOLITARY PULMONARY NODULE Dr.Santosh Atreya Phase-B Resident Department of Radiology & Imaging
  • 2. • Please download the presentation firstly , to get all the number of images that are being overlapped by animations. • Thank you !!
  • 3. A solitary pulmonary nodule, according to the - Nomenclature Committee of the Fleischner Society,is defined as a discrete, well-marginated, nearly circular opacity less than or equal to 3 cm in diameter that is completely surrounded by lung Parenchyma. Does not touch the hilum or mediastinum, and is without associated atelectasis or pleural effusion. Definition
  • 4.
  • 5. • Most solitary pulmonary nodules are benign. However, they may represent an early stage of lung cancer. Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States, accounting for more deaths annually than breast, colon, and prostate cancers combined. • Over 1 million nodules are detected each year as an incidental finding, either on chest radiographs or thoracic computed tomography (CT) scans. • 40% of solitary pulmonary nodules are malignant, with other common lesions being granulomas & benign tumours.
  • 6. Classification Malignant: Primary nodule Secondary nodule Lymphoma Plasmacytoma Alveolar cell carcinoma Benign: Hamartoma Adenoma Connective tissue tumours Granuloma: Tuberculosis Histoplasmosis Paraffinoma Sarcoidosis
  • 7. Infection: Round Pneumonia Pulmonary infarct Pulmonary Haematoma Collagen Diseases Rheumatoid arthritis Wegener’s granulomatosis Abscess Hydatid Amoebic Fungi Parasites Rounded atelectasis Round pneumonia Congenital: Bronchogenic cyst Pulmonary Sequestration Congenital Bronchial atresia AVM Miscellaneous: Impacted mucus Amyloidosis Intrapulmonary lymph node Pleural:Fibroma, Tumour, Loculated fluid Non Pulmonary: Skin & chest wall lesions, Artefact Contd…
  • 8.
  • 9. Size Interpretation <3mm 99.8% Benign 4-7mm 99.1% Benign 8-20 mm 82% Benign >20 mm 50% Benign >30 mm 7% Benign
  • 10. SPURIOUS LESIONS ON CXR • Nipple shadow • Pleural based lesions • Chest wall lesions • Skin nodules • Artifacts due to clothing • Screen artifacts Benign granuloma and primary bronchogenic carcinomas account for 80% of cases of SPN
  • 11. Classic example of “hyposkilia” – the patient had never been examined by physician. This patient had neurofibromatosis 1
  • 12. This lady also came for a CT guided biopsy of a left mid-zone lesion
  • 14. SPURIOUS LESIONS ON CXR • Nipple shadow • Pleural based lesions • Chest wall lesions • Skin nodules • Artifacts due to clothing • Screen artifacts Benign granuloma and primary bronchogenic carcinomas account for 80% of cases of SPN
  • 15. IMAGING OF SPN • CHEST RADIOGRAPH • CT SCAN • MRI • FDG-PET / SPECT
  • 16. How to detect SPN Lesion ?? • • • • • Pickup – Depends on the radiologist experience Experience & Expertise The “Ten-Thousand” hours rule  High kV Digital radiograph - these allow manipulation on a computer monitor and a higher rate of detection The principle holds that 10,000 hours of "deliberate practice" are needed to become world-class in any field.
  • 17. • A nodule is assessed for its size,shape & outline and for the presence of calcification or cavitation. • A search is made for associated abnormalities such as bone destruction,effusions,lobar collapse,septal lines & lymphadenopathy.
  • 18. • Several radiologic characteristics found on CT scanning and radiography may help to suggest whether a lesion is benign or malignant. These include the following: • Size • Shape • Location • Margin • Doubling Time • Internal characteristics • HRCT is the most sensitive and specific for assessing the size, shape, calcification and margin of a nodule
  • 19. MORPHOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF SPN 1. SIZE Size less than 10 mm : Difficult to appreciate on a plain film & often appear as a “Smudge” shadow rather than a mass. But readily seen on CT.
  • 20. 2.SHAPE CARCINOMAS : Irregular,Spiculated or Notched margins. Lobulation occurs in 25% of benign nodules. BENIGN : ROUND/OVAL/SMOOTH On occasions Infective Processes have a round appearance which is usually ill defined.
  • 21. 3.LOCATION: Nodules that are attached to pleura, vessels, or fissures are likely to be benign • Central tumors: small cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma • Peripheral tumors: adenocarcinoma, large cell carcinoma • Metastasis usually basal and sub pleural • Benign lesions are equally distributed throughout the lungs
  • 22. 4.MARGIN • MALIGNANT : irregular/spiculated/lobulated ( radial extension of the tumor cells along the lymphatics, small airways or blood vessels) • BENIGN : smooth/sharp Metastases and carcinoid tumors have sharp, smooth edges 21% of well defined nodules are malignant
  • 23. Fine linear strands extending 4-5 mm outward Spiculated on CXRs 84 – 90% are malignant Corona radiata sign
  • 24. Bronchogenic carcinoma. (A) Relatively well-defined mass. (B) Ill-defined solitary nodule.
  • 25. She has a 2.2 cm sized nodule in the right mid-zone
  • 26. Next Steps • A – Do nothing - old granuloma • B – Aggressive - suspected malignancy • C – Give antibiotics or ATT • D – Investigate further
  • 28. • A lateral film is often necessary to confirm that a lesion is intrapulmonary before investigating further.
  • 29. This lesion is intra-pulmonary – seen on both frontal and lateral radiographs in the lung
  • 30. • Typically an intrapulmonary mass forms an acute angle with the lung edge whereas, extrapleural & mediastinal masses form obtuse angles. Extra Pleural Mass
  • 31. • Name:Rokaya Age: 60 Yrs Address:Farid- pur C/O :Pain in lower back for 3 years. Recently she developed mild chest pain.
  • 32. Criteria for benignity A - Calcification B - Absence of enhancement C - No Change in size for 18 months
  • 33. Completely calcified - benign Engulfed calcific focus by a malignant lesion
  • 34. 5.Doubling Time • Volume doubling time is the time required for a lesion to double its volume • Malignant lesions : Doubling time of 1-6 months • Benign lesions: Do not change their size for 18 months. such as granuloma, hamartoma, bronchial carcinoid, and rounded atelectasis. • In general, doubling times of less than 20 days suggest infections. • An increase of 28% in nodule diameter indicates doubling
  • 35. CT scan in an 80-year-old man: 2.5-cm right upper lobe nodule at posterior segment Repeat CT scan 2 months later: Rapid interval enlargement. Volumetric doubling time was 35 days. FNAB revealed mixed small cell and non–small cell carcinoma.
  • 36. A B C April 06 June 08 Completely calcified and no growth in 2 years - benign
  • 37. plain post-contrast No enhancement whatsoever - benign
  • 38. May July She shows a significant increase in size over 2 ½ months
  • 40. Benign: • Diffuse • Central • Popcorn • Laminated 6.INTERNAL CHARACTERISTICS OF SPN  Potentially Malignant • Stippled • Eccentric Calcification Patterns
  • 44. Eccentric dense calcification in right lower lobe carcinoid Amorphous calcification in non small cell ca lung
  • 45. • LESION WITH WALL THICKNESS < 4 mm -LIKELY BENIGN > 16 mm- LIKELY MALIGNANT 4-16 MM – INDETERMINATE • IRREGULAR – LIKELY MALIGNANT • THIN SMOOTH – LIKELY BENIGN Cavitation Malignant cavitation
  • 46. • Air bronchograms and pseudocavitation more commonly malignant • Desmoplastic reaction to the tumor distorts the airway causing narrowing and/or irregularity of the small bronchi in relation to the tumor • Seen as cystic glandular spaces within the mass PSEUDOCAVITATION / AIR BRONCHOGRAMS
  • 47. • Angioinvasive Pulmonary Aspergillosis • Blood clot in a cyst • Complicated hydatid disease • Ca arising in a cyst • Pulmonary gangrene AIR CRESCENT SIGN Early CT finding is a rim of ground-glass opacity surrounding the nodules (CT halo sign). Angioinvasive aspergillosis. CT section at the level of the aortic arch shows two nodules with eccentric Cavitation and “air crescent sign” . These findings in this neutropenic patient are highly diagnostic of angioinvasive aspergillosis.
  • 48. Usually seen in benign lesions like lung abscess, infected cyst or cavity AIR FLUID LEVEL
  • 50. Small nodules adjacent to larger nodule or mass,predictor of benign disease like granulomatous diseases Galaxy sign : satellite nodules in sarcoidosis Presence of satellite nodules in lung tumors is considered as locally advanced tumor SATELLITE NODULES
  • 51. Small pulmonary artery leading directly to a nodule Seen in AVF, hematogenous metastasis, infarct FEEDING VESSEL SIGN
  • 52. • A pulmonary lesion that directly abuts, narrows or occludes bronchial lumen is more likely to be malignant • Also seen in tuberculoma, pulmonary infarcts, Inflammatory masses • This sign helps in whether transbronchial or trans thoracic biopsy helps in histological diagnosis POSITIVE BRONCHUS SIGN
  • 54. Next steps • A - Trial of therapy • B - CT guided biopsy • C - Bronchoscopy guided biopsy • D - Lobectomy
  • 56. Tips during biopsy • Biopsy not FNAC • At least 5 cores • Material for EGFR mutation studies
  • 57. Gun-cannula technique – stylet in cannula and gun
  • 58. Foot pedal and in-room monitor allow accurate control along with CT fluoroscopy
  • 59. SPN PA radiograph BENIGN Calcification Lesion external or extra- pulmonary I INDETERMINATE Old X-rays BENIGN No change over 18 months INDETERMINATE CT scan / PET CT BENIGN No enhancement or uptake ,Calcification INDETERMINATE BIOPSY
  • 60. NOTE • Risk of malignancy increases with age. For individuals younger than 39 years, the risk is 3%. The risk increases to 15% for individuals aged 40-49 years, to 43% for persons aged 50- 59 years, and to more than 50% for persons older than 60 years.
  • 61. Sometimes, some lesions are characteristic
  • 63. GRANULOMA Commonest are Tuberculomas Tuberculoma: more common in the upper lobes & on the right side.  Well defined ; 0.5-4 cm.25% are lobulated.  Calcification frequent.  80% have satellite lesions. Cavitation is uncommon.  Usually persists unchanged for years.
  • 64.
  • 65. PULMONARY HAMARTOMA • Benign pulmonary mass containing connective tissue , Cartilage , fat , smooth muscle , marrow , and bone • Most common location – periphery of the lung • X ray chest – spherical ,lobulated , well defined nodule • Popcorn like calcification • Fat density within the mass is a diagnostic feature • ge > 40yrs (96%)
  • 66. Central Lucencies : • Fat • 50 % contains fat & 30 % contains calcium
  • 67. The parenchymal lesion in this computed tomography (CT) scan demonstrates low attenuation within the lesion, indicating the presence of fat. Fat density is observed only in hamartoma and lipoid pneumonia. The likely diagnosis is hamartoma
  • 68. • X ray – well circumscribed lesion with lobulated outline • CT - Feeding vessels and draining vein can be seen • It can be confirmed on CT • PULMONARY ANGIOGRAPHY RARELY INDICATED Lobulated,well marginated nodule in the lower lobe AVM Feeding artery (arrow) and an enlarged draining vein (arrowhead). Simple pulmonary arteriovenous malformation. CT scan at the level of the lung bases shows a well-defi ned, smooth, round nodule. Note:That the feeding vessel is about half the diameter of the fi stula.
  • 69. Nidus of malformation Pulmonary angiogram helps confirm arteriovenous malformation. Note the early draining vein (arrows)
  • 70. ROUND PNEUMONIA • Inflammatory pseudotumour • Some times pneumonic consolidation assumes a shape And density similar to pulmonary neoplasm • Careful study reveals irregular margin and air bronchogram • Common in children • May persists after recovery from infection
  • 71. VANISHING TUMOR • Sharply marginated collection of pleural fluid contained either within an interlobar pulmonary fissure or in a subpleural location adjacent to a fissure • Can occur on minor fissure , oblique fissure • Most of them are < 4 cms
  • 72. BRONCHIAL CARCINOID • Typical triad – Well defined,round lobulated lesion At the bifurcation Eccentric calcification account for up to 5% of lung cancers. These tumors are generally small (3-4 cm or less) when diagnosed and occur most commonly in persons under age 40.
  • 73. Nodule with eccentric calcifications (arrow) obstructing the posterior segmental bronchus of the right upper lobe. High-resolution CT scan shows a well-defined, round, partially endobronchial nodule (arrow) in the lateral subsegmental branch of the anterior segmental bronchus of the left upper lobe.
  • 74. On a contrast-enhanced CT scan (mediastinal windowing), the nodule demonstrates marked contrast enhancement and mimics a vascular structure On a contrast-enhanced CT scan (mediastinal windowing), the nodule demonstrates marked contrast enhancement and mimics a vascular structure
  • 75. ROUND ATELECTASIS • Chronic atelectasis that resembles mass-Pseudotumour  Can be differentiated from malignancy using CT - • Peripherily located , wedge shaped opacity • Rounded or wedge shaped mass, forms an acute angle with adjacent thickened pleura , commonly at lung base • Crow feet / comet tail of vesssels sweeping into the margin of this opacity • Air bronchogram visible in the centre portion of mass. • Homogenous contrast enhancement of the atelectatic lung. • Volume loss in the ipsilateral hemithorax.
  • 76. • Conventional tomographic scan of the chest in a lateral projection shows a large subpleural mass (arrowhead) in the right lower lobe of the lung. A curvilinear opacity (arrow), the comet tail sign, arises from the inferior pole of the mass and courses toward the hilum.
  • 77. CONTRAST ENHANCEMENT - S/O• NODULE ENHANCEMENT < 15 HU BENIGN LESION • NODULE ENHANCEMENT > 15 HU – S/O MALIGNANT LESION • SENSITIVITY - 95 -100% • SPECIFICITY -70 -93 %
  • 78. When is CT needed??  When CXR demonstrates • Uncalcified nodule • Nodule not stable for 18 months • Failure of symptomatic infiltrate to clear in 4-6 weeks.
  • 79. Disadvantages of MRI • Poor resolution • Cardiac and respiratory motion artifacts • Difficulty in detecting lesion < 1 cm lesion • Not useful in peripheral SPN due to signal loss
  • 80. PET SCAN • • • Highly valuable noninvasive tool It is 95% sensitive for identifying malignancy and 85% specific False positive results may occur in lesions that contain active inflammatory tissue (histoplasmomas)
  • 81. ROLE OF FDG-PET • Malignant cells have upregulated metabolisms and proliferate rapidly.This results in marked uptake of FDG • False negative results due to - < 10 mm • False positive results are due to –Active TB , Histoplasmosis , Rhematoid nodules ,Aspergillosis , wegeners granulomatosis • Possibility of malignancy with negative FDG-PET is <5%
  • 83. • TEXTBOOK OF RADIOLOGY AND IMAGING BY DAVID SUTTON • HAAGA • CHAPMAN & NAKIELNY’S • Evaluation of solitary pulmonary nodule : INDIAN JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY Bibliography

Editor's Notes

  1.  Infectious granulomas  Vascular  Congenital  Inflammatory  Benign tumors  Miscellaneous BENIGN SOLITARY PULMONARY NODULES
  2. Granuloma:most common lung mass Hamartoma:3rd most common lung mass
  3.  Other risk factors include exposures to asbestos, second hand smoke, radon, arsenic, ionizing radiation, haloethers, nickel, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.  Prior travel history, places of residence, occupation, and pets (benign disease)
  4. 7% bening means 93 % malignant & More than 30mm in diameter is mass.
  5. Acute lung abscess. Large right middle lobe abscess containing an air-fluid level (arrows) in an intravenous drug abuser.