Haematological Malignancies Flashcards

1
Q

Basic Mechanisms of Leukaemia Development

A

Mutations in Bone Marrow:

  • Viral - e.g. EBV
  • Drugs
  • Toxins
  • Genetics
  • Environment

Clonal Expansion

Transformed Cells Resistant to Apoptosis

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2
Q

Consequences of Leukaemia

A

Increased WBC Count with potentially abnormal cells that increase susceptibility to infection

Bone Marrow Failure

  • Anaemia
  • Thrombocytopenia

Metastasis

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3
Q

Acute Leukaemias

A

Usually short time course between discovery and death if untreated

Failure of maturation, useless cells accumulate in bone marrow then spill over into circulation

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4
Q

Types of Acute Leukaemia

A

Myeloid or Lymphoblastic depending on cell line involved

Lymphoblastic - most common in children

  • 85% cure rate in children
  • 40% cure rate in adults

Myeloid - Most common in adults

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5
Q

Chronic myeloid leukaemia

A

Replacement of normal bone marrow cells with cells of abnormal chromosome (90% have Philadelphia chromosome)

  • Raised WBC count
  • Splenomegaly

Middle age

Typically well in chronic phase but transformation to acute phase is associated with mortality

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6
Q

Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia

A

Most common in older patients (peak age 72)

May be symptomless and diagnosed on blood test

Abnormal lymphocytes in lymphoid tissue (including bone);
Increased lymphocytes in blood

Enlarged lymph nodes

Infections more common

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7
Q

Hodkin’s Lymphoma

A

Enlarged painless lymph nodes
Fever
Pruritus

Reed-Sternberg Cells

May invade other organs, e.g. lungs - present as pulmonary disease

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8
Q

Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma

A

High or Low grade

Extranodal disease: GI, CNS, Endocrine, Skin, Pulmonary

Non-hodgkin’s Addociated with:

  • Previous Chemotherapy
  • Immunosuppressants
  • EBV
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9
Q

Chemotherapeutic treatment

A

Use of drugs to manage malignancies - Chemotherapy

DNA synthesis and mitosis is targeted - Cytotoxic drugs that kill rapidly dividing cells

Carried out in cycles with induction and maintenance phase

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10
Q

Bone Marrow Transplantation

A

Transplant of stem cells to cure leukaemia

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11
Q

Allogeneic Transplant

A

Cells which are genetically dissimilar and hence immunologically incompatible, although from individuals of the same species

Hence marrow transplant must be tissue matched

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12
Q

Autologous Transplant

A

Must be cleared of abnormal cells via mAB

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13
Q

How is bone marrow donation taken

A

Usually 750ml bone marrow removed from pelvis (don’t memorise value) under general anaesthetic
Or peripheral collection

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14
Q

What does a bone marrow recipient go through

A

High dose chemotherapy and sometimes total body irradiation to destroy tumour cells & bone marrow

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15
Q

Imatinib

A

Selective anticancer drug, very efective in chronic myeloid leukaemia

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16
Q

Mechanism of Imatinib

A

Philadelphia chromosome produces bcr-abl protein which has tyrosine kinase activity that leads to cell proliferations - Imatinib inhibits TK Activity

17
Q

Rituximab

A

mAB against CD20 (lymphocyte antigen)

Used in non-hodkin’s lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukaemia

18
Q

Multiple Myeloma

A

Cancerous proliferation of plasma cells of bone marrow

Causes bone marrow failure

(same as myeloma)

19
Q

Clinical Presentation of Myeloma

A
Anaemia
High ESR
Back Pain
Unexpected Renal Failure
Unusual Fractures
20
Q

Treatments of Multiple Myeloma

A

Chemotherapy
Thalidomide
Bone marrow transplants in fitter patients