Lung Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

Non-smoking causes of lung cancer

A

radiation, esp. from decay of 238 Ur (radon gas)
this has a long latency period, and is synergistic with smoking
asbestos: most frequent cause of occupational lung cancer with a long latency. risks are also much, much worse when combined with smoking

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2
Q

What should I know about the natural history of lung cancer?

A

by the time most lung cancers are symptomatic and/or detectable, they have already metastasized

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3
Q

What is the progression to lung cancer

A

often preceded by mucosal changes like hyperplasia and metaplasia. these are reversible.
dysplasia and carcinoma in situ are irreversible

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4
Q

squamous metaplasia

A

reactive change seen with chronic inflammation. regresses after smoking cessation. widely dispersed cells, regular maturation, low nuclear/cytplasmic ratio

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5
Q

dysplasi

A

hypercellular, incomplete maturation, invasion of capillaries, high nuclear cytplasm ratio

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6
Q

carcinoma in situ

A

pleomorphism with irregularity and promienent nucleoli

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7
Q

squamous cell cacinoma

A

mass in major bronchi that can block airway. obstructive pneumonitis is a common complication. doesn’t ussually develop peripherally, but when it does, you see caviation and central necrosis
may cause hemoptysis

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8
Q

Adenocarcinoma

A

peripheral mass
may remain asymmptomatic until the tumor is very large
may invade blood and lymph nodes early in development and often metastasizes before the primary lesion has symptoms
most common cancer in smokers and non-smokers

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9
Q

bronchioalveolar carcinoma

A

probably a variant on adenocarcinoma
it originates in terminal bronchioles and alveolar lining
may remain localized for along time
columnar cells prliferate along the framework of the alveolar space. they are relatively well-differentiated. better prognosis than most other lung cancers. more false negatives with PET

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10
Q

small cell carnioma

A

seen in large bronchus and infiltrates its wall
rarely diagnosed while localized to the lung. throws very early metastases to hilar and mediastinal lymph nodes. amenable to radiation- but prognosis is still very poor.
only seen in smokers
do a PET scan and look in the brain for mets.

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11
Q

carcinoid tumors

A

typical: endobronchial lesions that may cause airway obstruction. 90% survival at 5 yrs
atypical: more lymph node spread and worse long term survival.
no necrosis. peripheral types often asymmptomatic.

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12
Q

types of lung cancer presentation

A

asymptomatic, problems from primary lesion, problem from metastases and intrathoracic spread, and paraneoplastic syndromes

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13
Q

presentations of primary lesion

A

cough, dyspmena, hemoptysis

also chest pain, other, pneuomia, obstruction

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14
Q

Presentation of intrathoracic spread of lung ca

A

dysphagia, pleural effusion, hoarseness, Horner’s, Pancoast, SVC syndrome

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15
Q

Pancoast

A

due to cervical/thoracic nerve invasion. often accompanied by Horner’s syndrome

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16
Q

SVC syndrome

A

superior vena cava syndrome. swollenf face, engorgement of jugalr. often responds to chemo and often due to small cell carcinoma. this is an emergency

17
Q

pericardial effusion

A

pericardial invasion by tumor causing an accumulation of fluid in the pericardium. Emergency

18
Q

Where does lung cancer metastasize to?

A

brain (70% of all brain mets are from lung), bone (esp. vertebrae), liver, adrenals, skin

19
Q

what are paraneoplastic syndromes

A

non-metastatic systemic manifestions of CA often due to broduction of bioactive stubstances by the tumor or in response to the tumor. significant in 10-20% of pts w lung CA

20
Q

Examples of paraneoplastic syndromes associated with lung CA

A

hypercalcemia
digital clubbing and hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy, esp. with adenocarcinoma
Lambert-Eaton and other neuro symptoms