13 - Neoplasia 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is a tumour burden?

A
  • When malignant cells acquire the ability to invade and spread to distant sites, this leads to ‘parasitic’ malignant cells
  • Once primary tumour removed, tumour can reappear in other sites due to metastases
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2
Q

How do malignant cells get from a primary site to a secondary site and what difficulties do the cells face?

A
  1. Grow and invade at primary site
  2. Enter a transport system and lodge at secondary site
  3. Grow at secondary site and form tumour (colonisation)

At all stages they can be destroyed by immune cells

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3
Q

How does invasion of malignant cells to surrounding tissue occur in general and what happens to the name of these cells when these cellular changes occur?

A

- Altered adhesion

- Stromal proteolysis

- Motility

Carcinoma cell appears more like a mesenchymal cell than epithelial so this is called epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT)

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4
Q

How does altered adhesion occur in malignant cells?

A

- Reduction in e-cadherin expression between the malignant cells

- Reduction in integrin expression between malignant cell and stroma

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5
Q

How does proteolysis of the basement membrane occur in malignant cells and what can these cells do once they have broken down the basement memrbane?

A
  • Cells express matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) to degrade basement membrane and stroma
  • Malignant cells grow with nearby non-neoplastic cells to form a cancer niche. Non-neoplastic cells can provide growth factors and proteases
  • Malignant cells secrete local mediators to recruit this cancer niche
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6
Q

How does altered motility of the malignant cells occur?

A
  • Changes in actin cytoskeleton
  • Actin interacting with integrins. Signalling occurs through integrins via small G proteins such as members of the Rho family (RAS)
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7
Q

How can malignant cells be transported to different sites, the transport systems)

A

Angiogenesis and lympogenesis can occur when the tumour is establishing which help it to spread

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8
Q

What is the greatest barrier to the formation of a metastasis?

A

- Colonisation

  • Tiny malignant cell clusters lodge at secondary sites and either die or fail to grow. However, surviving microscopic deposits can remain and form micrometastases
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9
Q

Why can a person have a tumour removed and then have a malignant neoplasm relapse a few years later?

A

Person may have many micrometastases that cannot be detected clinically and they grow. This is tumour dormancy

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10
Q

How can you predict the site of a secondary tumour?

A
  • Depends on the mode of transport of the malignant cells
  • Blood-borne metastases are harder to predict (regional drainage or seed and soil theory)
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11
Q

Why do we get tumour dormancy?

A
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12
Q

Why do blood bourne metastases normally lodge in the lung and the liver?

A

They travel in the blood and the lung is the first area with a capillary bed, small vessels where it can lodge

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13
Q

What is the seed and soil hypothesis of metastasis?

A
  • Cancer cells are seeds and the organ the seed interacts with is the soil
  • Explains why metastases only occur in some areas, e.g more in the bone than the spleen, as they harbour a better environment for the cells
  • Distant metastasis is not as unpredictable as we think
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14
Q

How do carcinomas and sarcomas typically spread in the body?

A
  • Carcinomas by lymphatics
  • Saarcomas by blood stream
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15
Q

What are common sites of blood-bourne metastases?

A
  • Lung
  • Bone
  • Liver
  • Brain
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16
Q

What neoplasms most frequently form secondary’s in the bone?

A
  • Prostate
  • Breast
  • Bronchus
  • Kidney
  • Thyroid
17
Q

What are the four stages of a cancer?

A

Depends on how far the spread is, local being lymph nodes locally, stage 4 being blood spread

18
Q

What does it mean by malignant neoplasms have ‘personalities’?

A
  • Different neoplasms have different characteristics
  • E.g small cell bronchial carcinoma metastasise early in their cours but basal cell carcinoma almost never metastasises
  • Likelihood of metastasis depends on the size of the primary tumour
19
Q

What are the effects of neoplasms on the body in general?

A

Benign usually only due to local primary effects and hormones

20
Q

What are paraneoplastic syndromes?

A

A set of signs and symptoms that is the consequence of cancer in the body, but unlike mass effect, is not due to the local presence of cancer cells.

21
Q

What are some local effects of neoplasms?

A
  1. Direct invasion and destruction of normal tissue
  2. Ulceration of surface leading to blleding
  3. Compression of adjacent structures
  4. Blocking of tubes/openings
22
Q

What are some systemic effects of malignant neoplasms?

A

Burden: Reduced appetite, weight loss, cachexia, malaise, immunosuppression (can also be due to direct bone marrow destruction), thrombosis

Hormone: Paraneoplastic syndromes due to well differentiation and secreting hormones (mainly benign)

Misc: Neuropathies of brain and peripheral nerves, skin problems such as pruritis and abnormal pigmentation, fever, finger clubbing and myositis

DUE TO CYTOKINES AND INCREASING TUMOUR BURDEN

23
Q

What is a polyp?

A

A small benign growth typically found on a mucous membrane

24
Q

How can colon cancer present as an emergency?

A
  • Haemorraghe
  • Perforation and peritonitis and sepsis
  • Obstruction
25
Q

What is a leiomyoma?

A
  • Fibroids
  • Benign growth of smooth muscle, mainly in the uterus, small bowel and oesophagus
26
Q

What type of tumour of this, what is its cell of origin, where is it found and how does it behave?

A

- Teratoma (Dermoid cyst)

  • Typically in skull, ovary, face, tailbone
  • Arise from germ cells and contain mainly skin. They are benign in ovaries but often malignant in the testes so well differentiated in ovaries
27
Q

What is a struma ovarii?

A

Goitre of the ovary

  • Tumour in the ovary containing thyroid tissue
28
Q

Why might someone will leukaemia have a pale conjuctiva?

A

Due to the fact there is a decreased production of RBCs’ as malignant bone marrow

29
Q

What is this?

A
  • Pepper pot skull
  • Lots of lytic lesions
  • Typical of multiple myeloma
30
Q

An autopsy of a woman with lung cancer is carried out and this MRI is obtained, what is the likely cause of her death?

A
  • Metastases
  • Malignancy is causing brain shift and coning which is pressing on respiratory centre at brainstem
31
Q

Where can malignant melanomas arise?

A
  • Skin
  • Intestines
  • Eye
32
Q

What hormones can the following tumours produce:

  • Small cell carcinoma of the lung
  • Testicular teratoma
  • Well differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma
A
  • ACTH
  • Human chorionic gonadotropin
  • 5-hydroxytryptamine