RECTAL CANCER MRI
Complete Exam-Oriented Handbook for Gastro / GI Surgery Trainees (DNB/MCh)
Author: Dr. Sharad Maheshwari
Email: imagingsimplified@gmail.com
Date: December 2025
PART 1 — HOW TO IDENTIFY MRI SEQUENCES (WITHOUT LABELS)
This is a favorite exam trap. Often sequence labels are removed.
1. T1-WEIGHTED IMAGES
How it looks:
- Very few shades of grey
- Almost black and white
- Flat appearance
- Poor soft-tissue contrast
Signal characteristics:
- Fat → bright
- Muscle → intermediate
- Fluid (urine, CSF) → dark
Bladder on T1:
- Normally dark
- If bladder is bright, think:
- Post-contrast T1
- Blood / protein (rare in pelvis, common exam trap)
⭐ Key exam pearl — Post-contrast T1 bladder
- Gadolinium is excreted in urine
- It does NOT mix immediately
- It is dependent
- Therefore bladder shows:
- Inhomogeneous signal
- Fluid–fluid level
- Bright dependent layer, darker non-dependent urine
👉 If bladder is bright AND layered → T1 post-contrast. This NEVER happens on T2.
2. T2-WEIGHTED IMAGES (MOST IMPORTANT)
How it looks:
- Many shades of grey
- Excellent soft-tissue contrast
- “Rich” image
Signal characteristics:
- Fluid → bright (Bladder, Rectal lumen, CSF)
- Tumor → intermediate signal
- Fibrosis → low signal
Why T2 is king:
- Tumor extent
- Mesorectal fat
- CRM (Circumferential Resection Margin)
- Sphincter involvement
- Levator ani
- EMVI (Extramural Venous Invasion)
- Nodes vs deposits
👉 Rectal MRI is basically T2 MRI + diffusion
3. DIFFUSION-WEIGHTED IMAGING (DWI)
How it looks:
- Grainy
- Darker
- Poor anatomic clarity
Always comes as a PAIR:
- B-value image (usually B800)
- ADC map
⭐ Golden tumor rule (must memorize)
True diffusion restriction:
- Bright on B800
- Dark (black) on ADC
If bright on both → T2 shine-through, NOT tumor.
PART 2 — STANDARD RECTAL MRI PROTOCOL (EXAM EXPECTATION)
You should be able to say this fluently.
Core Sequences
- T2-weighted images
- Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI)
- Contrast is optional, not routine.
T2 Planes (Very Important)
Sagittal: Overall anatomy, Tumor level, Relation to peritoneal reflection
Axial oblique:
- Perpendicular to long axis of tumor
- MOST IMPORTANT plane
- Used for: T stage, CRM, EMVI, Sphincter invasion
Coronal: Cranio-caudal extent, Levator ani and pelvic floor
Diffusion
- B800
- ADC correlation mandatory
PART 3 — T STAGING BASICS (RECTAL CANCER)
T1 → submucosa
T2 → muscularis propria
T3 → mesorectal fat
- T3a: < 5 mm
- T3b/c/d: increasing depth
T4a → peritoneum
T4b → adjacent organs
PART 4 — DESMOPLASTIC REACTION vs TRUE T3 (VERY COMMON EXAM CONFUSION)
Desmoplastic Reaction
What it is: Reactive fibrosis (Host response to tumor)
MRI appearance:
- Fine, wispy strands
- Linear or spiculated
- Low to intermediate T2 signal
- No mass, No nodularity
- Tapers away from tumor
True T3 Tumor Extension
What it is: Actual tumor breaching muscularis propria
MRI appearance:
- Bulky
- Nodular
- Convex or lobulated margin
- Intermediate signal same as tumor
- Often associated with EMVI or nodes
⭐ One-line exam rule
- Wispy = desmoplastic reaction
- Nodular = true T3
Overcalling reaction → unnecessary chemoradiation. Undercalling T3 → positive CRM.
PART 5 — EXTRAMURAL VENOUS INVASION (EMVI)
This is not optional anymore.
What is EMVI
- Tumor invading veins outside muscularis propria
- Strong predictor of distant metastasis
- Independent prognostic factor
MRI Appearance
- Tubular or serpiginous structures
- Expanded vessel
- Irregular contour
- Tumor signal replacing normal flow void
- Often adjacent to tumor
EMVI vs Lymph Node
| Feature | EMVI | Node |
|---|---|---|
| Shape | Tubular / serpiginous | Round / oval |
| Course | Follows vessel | Random |
| Prognosis | Systemic risk | Regional risk |
Clinical implication
- EMVI+ pushes MDT toward: Neoadjuvant therapy (Often TNT)
- Even if T3a N0
👉 Missing EMVI = false reassurance
PART 6 — LYMPH NODE vs PERIRECTAL TUMOR DEPOSIT (EXTREMELY HIGH-YIELD)
Lymph Node
What it is: Discrete tumor nodule in mesorectal fat. No lymphoid tissue left.
Features:
- Round or oval
- Smooth or mildly irregular margins
- May have fatty hilum
- Size alone unreliable
Tumor Deposit
What it is: Discrete tumor nodule in mesorectal fat. No lymphoid tissue left.
MRI features:
- Irregular, Spiculated
- Same signal as primary tumor
- No hilum
- Often close to tumor
⭐ Key exam pearl
If it looks like tumor and behaves like tumor, call it a tumor deposit.
Tumor deposits behave worse than nodes.
PART 7 — CRM (CIRCUMFERENTIAL RESECTION MARGIN)
What is CRM
- Distance from tumor (or deposit / node / EMVI) to mesorectal fascia
- Measured on axial oblique T2
Interpretation
- ≤1 mm → threatened CRM (Strong predictor of local recurrence)
What threatens CRM
- Primary tumor
- Tumor deposit
- EMVI
- Enlarged node
👉 Always specify what is threatening CRM.
PART 8 — SPHINCTER INVOLVEMENT (LOW RECTAL TUMORS)
Structures to assess
- Internal anal sphincter
- External anal sphincter
- Inter-sphincteric plane
- Levator ani
Important concept
T2 tumor with sphincter invasion behaves like advanced disease. Often managed with chemoradiation, not upfront surgery.
PART 9 — IMAGING vs TREATMENT DEBATES (EXAM FOCUS)
T2 with sphincter involvement
- Even though T2: Sphincter invasion → high risk
- Often treated with neoadjuvant chemoradiation
N2 disease
- Multiple or bulky nodes
- Strong indication for: Neoadjuvant therapy (Often TNT)
T3a N0
- If CRM clear, EMVI negative, Mid / upper rectum → Upfront surgery may be considered
- If any risk factor → radiate
PART 10 — ANATOMIC LANDMARKS AND REPORTING ESSENTIALS
Peritoneal Reflection Landmark
- The reflection is the boundary between the retroperitoneal (infra-reflection) and intraperitoneal (supra-reflection) rectum.
- It is typically found at the level of the recto-sigmoid junction or approximately 10-12 cm from the anal verge (measured endoscopically).
- Clinical Impact: Tumors extending through the wall above the reflection are T4a (peritoneal involvement, often requires multivisceral resection). Tumors extending below the reflection are usually T3 (mesorectal fat) or T4b (invasion of adjacent organs).
Structured Report Conclusion Line (Must-Have Exam Statement)
Your conclusion must condense the key surgical risk factors into one line:
⭐ Sample Structured Line
T3b (8mm ext.), CRM clear (7mm), EMVI Negative, N1a (3 suspicious nodes, 0 deposits).
Format: T-Stage (Depth), CRM Status (Distance), EMVI Status, Nodal Status (# nodes, # deposits).
PART 11 — LAST-MINUTE EXAM REVISION (READ BEFORE ENTERING HALL)
Rectal MRI is pattern recognition, not measurement
Always comment on:
- T stage
- CRM (Circumferential Resection Margin)
- EMVI (Extramural Venous Invasion)
- Nodes vs deposits
- Sphincter involvement
Axial oblique T2 is the deciding sequence.
Overstaging → overtreatment. Understaging → recurrence.
Final brutal truth (for residents)
If you describe the tumor but don’t comment on CRM and EMVI, you have failed the question — even if your T stage is correct.
Excellent effort to educate Gastroenterologists, surgeons and even doctors from other disciplines 👍👌
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