PI-RADS v2.1
Assistant
PI-RADS Assistant computer icon

Read PI-RADS v2.1 ↗
1. Lesion location
Select lesion location. Choose multiple zones only if the lesion crosses boundaries or the origin is uncertain.
Axial prostate zonal anatomy schematic
Click the image or the zone descriptions to select zone(s).
Selected zone(s)
Dominant sequence
DCE role
Contrast administered? Determines DCE availability
Why zone matters: PI-RADS scoring depends on lesion location. Peripheral zone lesions follow a DWI/ADC-dominant pathway, while transition zone and anterior lesions follow a T2 morphology-dominant pathway. Read the overview.
Choose a lesion location to set the suggested workflow order.
ADC / high b-value DWI descriptor Dominant sequence for PZ
T2 morphology descriptor Dominant sequence for TZ / anterior pathway
If a lesion crosses zones, choose the single T2 description that best matches the lesion morphology. The PZ pathway still follows DWI ± DCE; this T2 selection lets the assistant calculate the TZ/anterior pathway.
DCE behavior Only changes PZ lesions when DWI is 3
DCE will be ignored unless a peripheral-zone calculation has DWI score 3.
Size / invasive behavior modifier Applies only through PI-RADS v2.1 rules
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Educational decision support • Not a substitute for radiologist judgment
Quick guide

PI-RADS v2.1 Quick Guide

PI-RADS v2.1 is a standardized prostate MRI scoring system used to estimate the likelihood of clinically significant prostate cancer and communicate findings consistently.

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The PI-RADS score

ScoreMeaning
PI-RADS 1Very low suspicion
PI-RADS 2Low suspicion
PI-RADS 3Intermediate / equivocal
PI-RADS 4High suspicion
PI-RADS 5Very high suspicion

Peripheral zone: DWI is dominant

Peripheral zone lesions are scored primarily by ADC and high b-value DWI. A focal lesion that is dark on ADC and bright on high b-value DWI is more suspicious than a vague, linear, wedge-shaped, or diffuse abnormality.

Transition zone: T2 is dominant

Transition zone lesions are scored primarily by T2 morphology. Suspicious features include a lenticular or non-circumscribed shape, homogeneous moderate T2 hypointensity, and more invasive behavior. DWI can modify selected borderline TZ lesions, but it is not the dominant sequence.

When does DCE matter?

DCE has a limited but important role. In the peripheral zone, positive focal early enhancement can upgrade an otherwise PI-RADS 3 lesion to PI-RADS 4. DCE generally does not drive transition zone scoring.

Image quality caveat

If DWI or DCE is technically inadequate or not performed, PI-RADS assigns that component an “X.” Inadequate DWI is a major limitation, especially for peripheral-zone assessment. If DWI and DCE are both inadequate or absent, assessment should be limited to staging for extraprostatic extension.

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Bottom line

Remember the workflow: DWI drives peripheral zone scoring, T2 drives transition zone scoring, and DCE mainly helps decide whether a peripheral zone PI-RADS 3 lesion should be upgraded. PI-RADS should always be interpreted with the full MRI exam, sequence quality, PSA density, prior biopsy history, and clinical context.

Related tools and articles

References and further reading