Test 2 - pathology Flashcards

1
Q

Define grade and what it means to be low, intermediate, and high grade.

A

grade tells you how much the cancer looks like the original cell; differentiation

Low = resembles normal tissue (well differentiated)

intermediate = somewhat resembles normal tissue

High = does not resemble the normal tissue (poorly differentiated)

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2
Q

Is an in-situ carcinoma cancer?

A

No! To be cancer, it must invade the basement membrane

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3
Q

What is TNM staging?

A

Tumor, Node (lymph), Metastasis

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4
Q

What is an in-situ neoplasia?

A

Clonal overgowth of cells which have the potential to invade but have not yet done so

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5
Q

What is a carcinoma?

A

malignant neoplasm derived from epithelial cells

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6
Q

What should trigger you to think someone has a familial cancer syndrome?

A

Young age

rare/uncommon cancer

more than one type of cancer in one person

family history of rare/uncommon cancers

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7
Q

In Von Hippel Lindau disease, what chromosome is mutated? What does the vHL gene regulate?

A

chromosome 3

Hypoxia Inducible Factor

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8
Q

In Von Hippel Lindau disease, what do patients develop? Where?

A

Hemangioblastomas

Medulla, retina, and cerebellum

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9
Q

In Von Hippel Lindau disease, what are patients at increased risk for?

A

cysts in the pancreas, liver, and kidneys

bilateral renal carcinoma

pheochromocytoma

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10
Q

What is the major issue with retinoblastoma?

A

mutation in Rb allows for cell cycle to progress forward

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11
Q

How can retinoblastima be diagnosed with physical examination?

A

leukocoria

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12
Q

What is the major issue with lynch syndrome?

A

defective DNA mismatch repair gene

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13
Q

How is lynch syndrome inherited?

A

autosomal dominant

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14
Q

What are patients with lynch syndrome at high risk for developing (types of cancer)?

A

colon cancer

skin cancer

ovarian cancer

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15
Q

What is the major issue with Li Fraumeni?

A

Mutation in P53

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16
Q

How is Li Fraumeni inherited?

A

autosomal dominant

17
Q

What types of cancer are patients with Li Fraumini at risk for?

A

Breast

Brain

Sarcomas

Leukemias

Adrenalcortical carcinoma

18
Q

What type of cells make embryonic tumors?

A

blast cells

19
Q

What do blastomas have a tendancy to do depending on its environment?

A

Blastomas like try and differentiate towards the surrounding cell types (they like to try and look like its surrounding tissue)

20
Q

What is a neuroblastoma? What gene is typically mutated?

A

embryonic cancer of the adrenal glands

N-myc is typically mutated

21
Q

Can you tell what type of cancer this is just by looking at it?

A

No! Although this is a neuroblastoma, all blastomas look the same under the microscope

22
Q

What are the 3 main good prognostic features in neuroblastoma?

A

age < 1 year old

N-myc is not expressed/amplified

clinical stage 1, 2, 4s

23
Q

What embryonic malignancy is this?

(normal image is on the right)

A

Wilm’s/nephroblastoma

24
Q

This slide is triphasic. What is the embryonic maligancy?

A

Wilm’s tumor/nephroblastoma

The blast cells in the middle are trying to look like their surrounding

25
Q

Is Wilm’s tumor associate with congenital malformations?

A

Yes

26
Q

What is WAGR syndrome?

A

WAGR syndrome is a congenital malformation:

Wilm’s

Aniridia

Genital anomalies

Retardation

27
Q

What is medulloblastoma?

A

embryonic malignancy that typically arises in the cerebellum

28
Q

How does medulloblastoma spread?

A

Through the CSF

29
Q

What is the term for this clinical finding? What embryonic malignancy causes this?

A

sunburst pattern

osteosarcoma

30
Q

What is this cancer?

A

osteosarcoma

malignant osteoblasts lay down malignant osteoid

31
Q

Where in the bone does osteosarcoma tyically present (epiphysis/metaphysis/diaphysis)

A

metaphysis

32
Q

Are sunburst patterns seen here?

A

no

33
Q

What is Ewing’s sarcoma mutation?

A

t(11;22) in primitive neural cells

34
Q

What CD marker do Ewing’s sarcoma cells express?

A

CD99

35
Q

Where do Ewing’s sarcoma tumors typically present? (epiphysis/metaphysis/diaphysis)

A

diaphysis