Neoplasia Flashcards

1
Q

What is neoplasia?

A

A lesion resulting from autonomous or relatively autonomous abnormal growth of cells which persists after initialising stimulus removed

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2
Q

What makes a neoplasm malignant?

A

The ability to invade and metastasise. Potentially lethal with abnormal characteristics

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3
Q

What is a benign neoplasm?

A

A neoplasm that does not have the ability to invade and metastasise

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4
Q

4 main distinguishing features of neoplasms

A

Differentiation, rate of growth, local invasion, metastasis

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5
Q

What is differentiation in relation to neoplasms?

A

The extent to which neoplastic tissues resemble their tissue of origin.

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6
Q

Features of well differentiated neoplasms?

A

Looks close to tissue of origin, little or no anaplasia, can be malignant but more frequently benign

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7
Q

Features of poorly differentiated neoplasms?

A

Little resemblance to tissue of origin. Nuclear pleomorphism; abnormal nuclear features e.g. high nuclear:cytoplasm ratio, clumped chromatin, prominent nucleoli; increased mitotic activity; tumour giant cells; necrosis

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8
Q

Features of undifferentiated/anaplastic neoplasms?

A

Cannot be identified by morphology alone, may need special stains/techniques to diagnose

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9
Q

What is the difference between grade and stage of neoplasms?

A

Grade = how differentiated the tumour is (1= well differentiated, 3 = poor)
Stage = extent of spread of tumour (lower the better)

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10
Q

What is dysplasia?

A

Confined neoplastic change - features of malignancy but confined within basement membrane

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11
Q

What is carcinoma in situ?

A

Dysplastic changes that cover the full thickness of epithelium but without invasion - basement membrane not penetrated

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12
Q

Why are mitosis and necrosis associated with tumour rate of growth?

A

Malignant neoplasms are fast growing, benign are slow growing. Mitosis is a sign that lots of cells are dividing rapidly while necrosis is a sign that the tumour is growing so fast the blood supply can’t keep up

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13
Q

Local invasion - benign tumours

A

Cohesive and expansile masses, localised, don’t metastasise, usually slow growing and may be encapsulated

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14
Q

Local invasion - malignant tumours

A

Invasive, penetrate organ walls, tissues, epithelial surfaces, most reliable way of distinguishing malignant tumour next to metastases

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15
Q

Benign tumour of glandular/secretory epithelium

A

Adenoma (prefix with name of glandular tissue of origin e.g. colonic adenoma)

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15
Q

Naming of benign tumours

A

Suffix -oma

16
Q

Benign tumour of non-glandular/surface epithelium

A

Papilloma (prefix with cell type of origin e.g. squamous cell papilloma)

17
Q

Naming of benign mesenchymal tumours

A

Suffix -oma (preceded by tissue or cell of origin e.g. osteoma for benign tumour of bone, leiomyoma for benign tumour of smooth muscle)

18
Q

Naming of malignant epithelial tumours

A

Carcinoma
If from glandular epithelium, called adenocarcinoma
If from non-glandular epithelium, carcinoma prefixed with cell of origin e.g. squamous cell carcinoma

19
Q

Malignant tumour of glandular epithelium

A

(Epithelium source) adenocarcinoma e.g. colonic adenocarcinoma, breast adenocarcinoma

20
Q

Malignant tumour of non-glandular surface epithelium

A

(Cell type) carcinoma e.g. Basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma

21
Q

Naming of malignant mesenchymal tumours

A

Sarcoma prefixed with tissue or cell of origin e.g. rhabdomyosarcoma (malignant skeletal muscle tumour) or angiosarcoma (malignant blood vessel tumour)

22
Q

What is a teratoma?

A

Tumour of germ cell origin containing cells representing all three germ layers. Can be benign or malignant

23
Q

What is a precursor cell tumour?

A

Tumour with histological resemblance to embryological tissue in which they arise e.g. retinoblastoma, hepatoblastoma. Often occur in young patients

24
Q

What are neuroectodermal tumours?

A

Brain tumours e.g. glioblastoma multiforme, meningioma

25
Q

What is a hamartoma?

A

Non-neoplastic disordered overgrowth of normal tissue indigenous to site of occurrence. Developmental abnormality e.g. port wine stain

26
Q

What is a choristoma?

A

Benign normal tissue in abnormal location e.g. pancreas nodule in stomach. Also called heterotropic rest

27
Q

Name some haematolymphoid malignancies

A

Lymphoma - malignancy of B or T cell origin
Myeloma - malignancy of plasma cells
Leukaemia - malignancy of white blood cells

28
Q

Name some melanocytic neoplasms

A

Melanoma - malignancy of melanocytes
Melanocytic naevus - benign proliferation of melanocytes

29
Q

What are the hallmarks of cancer?

A
  1. Avoiding immune destruction
  2. Evading growth suppressors
  3. Enabling replicative immortality
  4. Tumour-promoting inflammation
  5. Activating invasion and metastasis
  6. Genomic instability
  7. Inducing angiogenesis
  8. Resisting cell death
  9. Deregulating cellular energetics
  10. Sustaining proliferative signalling
30
Q
A