Lung tumours Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two parts of the lung that can develop primary tumours?

A

Bronchial or pleural tumours

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2
Q

Risk factors for lung cancer?

A
Cigarette smoking 
Asbestos 
Chromium 
Arsenic 
Iron oxides
Radiation
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3
Q

95% of lung cancers are malignant. There are two classes of malignant lung cancer, what are they?

A

Small cell

Non small cell

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4
Q

Describe small cell lung cancers?

A

Arise from endocrine cells
Secrete polypeptide hormones
Metastasise early (poor prognosis)
Respond to chemo

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5
Q

What are the 3 different types of non small cell lung cancer?

A

Adenocarcinoma
Squamous cell carcinoma
Large cell carcinoma

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6
Q

What does the term adenoma describe?

A

Epithelial cell cancer

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7
Q

Adenocarcinoma is a type of non small cell lung cancer. Describe adenocarcinomas in the lungs

A

Associated with asbestos
More common in non smokers
Usually occurs peripherally

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8
Q

Squamous cell carcinoma is a type of non small cell lung cancer. How does it usually present?

A

Obstructive lesion

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9
Q

Large cell carcinoma is a type of non small cell lung cancer. Describe large cell lung cancer?

A

Poorly differentiated tumour,

Metastasises early

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10
Q

What is the prognosis of NSSC?

A

50% at 2 years with treatment

10% without treatment

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11
Q

How does lung cancer present clinically?

A
Cough 
Dyspnoea 
Wheeze
Haemoptysis 
Dysphagia 
Hoarseness 
Chest pain 
Head, neck and arm swelling (SVCO)
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12
Q

What symptoms of metastatic disease may present with lung cancer?

A

Bone pain
Headache
Hepatic/ abdominal pain
Seizures/ neurological deficit

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13
Q

What are clinical signs of lung cancer?

A

Finger clubbing
Cachexia (weakness/ wasting of body in chronic illness)
Anaemia
Lymphadenopathy
Chest may show: consolidation, effusion or collapse

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14
Q

What are none malignant causes of a nodule in lung on a chest X ray? (differential diagnosis)

A
Abscess 
Granuloma 
Carcinoid tumour 
Pulmonary hamartoma 
Cyst/ encysted effusion
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15
Q

What is a hamartoma?

A

Benign malformation in a tissue that resembles a malignancy

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16
Q

What 6 diagnostic tests would perform for lung cancer?

A
Cytology of sputum and pleural fluid
CXR
CT scan
PET scan
Bronchoscopy
Fine needle aspiration or biopsy
17
Q

What would CXR show in lung cancer?

A
Peripheral nodule 
Hilar enlargement 
Pleural effusion and consolidation
Lung collapse 
Bony secondaries
18
Q

What tests are used to determine staging of lung cancer?

A

Predominantly CT scan

PET scan

19
Q

How does a PET scan work?

A

Fluoro-2 deoxyglucose (FDG) taken up by rapidly dividing cells and not excreted)

20
Q

In TNM staging for NSCLC, how is T staged?

A

T0= none present

T1= under 3cm in bronchioles

T2= over 3cm and over 2cm from carina. Any size if pleural involvement/ obstructive pneumonitis.

T3=involves: chest wall, diaphragm, mediastinal pleura, pericardium or <2cm from carina. T >7cm and nodules in same lobe.

T4= involves mediastinum, heart, great vessels, trachea, oesophagus vertebral body, carina, malignant effusion, or nodules in another lobe

21
Q

In TNM staging for NSCLC how is N staged

A
N0= no nodes
N1= peribronchial or ipsilateral hilum
N2= Ipsilateral mediastinum or sub carinal 
N3= Contralateral mediastinum, hilum, scalene, supraclavicular
22
Q

Treatment for non small cell tumours?

A

Excision of peripheral tumours with no metastases (stage 1/2). If respiratory reserve is low radiotherapy may be curative.

For more advanced disease chemotherapy +- radiotherapy (not curative)

23
Q

How does TNM staging rank into a 1-4 staging?

A
1= T1/T2 N0 M0
2= T1/T2 N1 M0 or T3 N0 M0
3a= T3 N1 M0 or T1-3 N2 M0
3b= T1-4 N3 M0 or T4 N0-2 M0
4= anything with metastases
24
Q

How do you treat small cell tumours?

A

Usually already spread at presentation
May respond to chemo but will relapse
Chemotherapy (+- radiotherapy if chance of curing)

25
Q

Name some chemotherapy drugs used in small cell lung cancer treatment?

A

Cyclophosphamide
Doxorubicin
Cisplatin

26
Q

What is the difference between radical and palliative radiotherapy?

A

Radical= course of daily treatments, acute toxicity may be considerable (aims to cure)

Palliative radiotherapy= minimum number of visits compatible with symptom control, minimise acute toxicity

27
Q

Side effects of radiotherapy

A
Fatigue &amp; anorexia
Cough
Oesophagitis
Systemic symptoms
Skin reactions
Nausea rare
Alopecia only if cranial irradiation
28
Q

What is the WHO performance status?

A
0 - normal activity without restriction
1 - restricted, can do light work
2 - self-caring but no work, up > 50% 
3 - limited self-care, in bed/chair > 50%
4 - no self-care, bed / chair bound
29
Q

Chemotherapy side effects

A
Alopecia
Nausea, vomiting, fatigue
Peripheral neuropathy
Constipation and diarrhoea
Mucositis
Rash
Bone marrow suppression (Anaemia, Neutropenia, Thrombocytopenia) 
Anaphylaxis
30
Q

Asides chemo and radiotherapy, what other measures are done in the palliation of lung cancer?

A

SVC stent for SVC obstruction
Pleural drainage
Drugs: analgesia, steroids, antiemetics, cough lintus (codeine), bronchodilators, antidepressants

31
Q

What are other lung tumours asides NSCC and SMC?

A

Hamartoma= rare and benign
Bronchial adenoma= rare, slow growing, requires surgery
Mesothelioma