Breast Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

Risk factors for breast cancer?

A
  • Increasing age
  • Woman
  • BRCA 1/2 or Lif fraumeni syndrome
  • radiation exposure
  • alcohol or obesity
  • Increased lifetime exposure to estrogen
  • early menarche, late menopause, HRT, OCP
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2
Q

According toe the NCCN and ACS, how often to get a breast exam from Ages 20-39?

A

every 1-3 years old. The USPSTF recomments agins this

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3
Q

If you are > 40 yo and female, how often do the NCCN and ACS reccomend to do breast exam?

A

once a year

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4
Q

according to the USPSTF, how often to do a mammogram for breast cancer?

A

from 50-74 to biennial mammogram, recommend against screening <49 yo

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5
Q

should patients only screen for breast cancer through self exams?

A

no, and if they are average risk, they should clinical breast exams and mammograms

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6
Q

when is an MRI indicated for breast cancer detection?

A

High risk patients

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7
Q

most common symptom for breast cancer?

A

painless bump
unilateral, solid hard
irregular, non mobile
10% stable or aching pain

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8
Q

what exams can you run to diagnose breast cancer?

A

clinical breast exam
mammogram
biopsy**!!
lymph node dissection / mapping

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9
Q

what is the purpose of the breast biopsy?

A

to find the prescence of hormones, growth factors that determine what kind of cancer it is.

looking for : ER/PR +, HER2

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10
Q

what does HER 2 stand for? ER/PR

A

human epidermal growth factor 2
estrogen receptor
progestin receptor

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11
Q

what is the difference between in situ carcinoma and invasive carcinomas?

A

in situ carsinomas are inside the breast duct and have not spread outside the duct. Invasive types have spread beyond the duct

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12
Q

for which stages of breast cancer the goal to cure the cancer?

A

every stage except stage IV (when the cancer has metastasized.

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13
Q

what is the treatment for a carcinoma in situ?

A

lumpectovmy or consider mastectomy depending or risk

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14
Q

what is the treatment for stage I, IIA, IIB?

A

lumpectomay or mastectomy

and adjuvant therapy *check this

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15
Q

what is adjuvant therapy for breast cancer?

A

radiation
adjuvant chemo
+/- adjuvant endocrine therapy
+/- trastuzumab

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16
Q

what is the treatemtn for invasive breast cancer stage IIIA, B, C

A

lumpectomy or mastectomy

add neuadjuvant chemoterhapy to locoregional treatments

17
Q

what is the treatment for metastatic breast cancer stage IV?

A

endocrine therapy if ER/PR +
Trastuzumabe if HER2 +
Consider chemotherapy

18
Q

when do you use neoadjuvant /preoperative chemotherapy? what does that mean?

A

it means that you use chemotherapy before the operation to make the tumor smaller

  • usually when tumore >= 1cm
  • only if invasive breast cancer is convfirmed (stage 3 or higher)
19
Q

what is adjuvant therapy mean in the context of breast cancer and what does it mean?

A

chemotherapy used after the operation

typically when the tumor is > = 1 cm

20
Q

what classes of chemotherapy are used in breast cancer/

A

Anthracylines: doxorubicin, epirubicin

alkylator: cyclophosphamide
taxanes: paclitaxel, coextaxel, nab-paclitael

21
Q

adriamycin

A

doxorubicin

22
Q

ellence

A

epirubicin

23
Q

cytoxan

A

cyclophosphamide

24
Q

taxol

A

paclitaxel

25
Q

taxotere

A

docetaxel

26
Q

abraxane

A

nab-paclitaxel

27
Q

what agents can be used for neoadjuvant /adjuvant therapy?

A
anthracyclines: doxorubicin, epirubicin
adding taxane (once weekly, or q 3 week docetaxel0
28
Q

preferred regimen for HER2 negative?

A

AC: adriamycin/cyclophosphamde then paclitaxel
TAC: dcetaxel, doxcoroubicin, cyclophosphamide
TC: docetaxel/ cyclophosphamide

29
Q

what is the preferred neoadjuvant treatnment t?

A

T (docetaxe) folloed bey CEF (cyclophosphamide/ eipirubicine, flurouracil+ trastuzumab

30
Q

MOA of antrhacyclines

A

intercaltating agents that are cell cycle nonspecific
inhibit topoisomerase II (doxorubicin)
creates iron mediated free oxydne redicals

31
Q

anthracyclines renal or hepatic dose adjustment?

A

heaptic dose adjustment required

32
Q

SEs of Anthracyclines?

A

Cardiotoxicity (blockage of HER2 affects signalling of heart cells)
myelosupression, alopecial
red discoloration of urine, swears, tears
moderate emetic potential
secondary malignancy: AML, Myeolodysplastic syndrome

33
Q

when do u reach nadir for neutropenia/ thrombocytopenia/ anemia for anthracycliens?

A

10-14 days

recover in ~21 days

34
Q

what is the MOA of cyclophosphamide

A

prevents DNA synthesis by crosslinking DNA-DNA or DNA to preteen, causing strand breaks and misreading of DNA
-cell cycle non-specific

35
Q

renal or hepatic adjustment for cyclophosphamide?

A

hepatic Bili 3.5-5 or AST >180 give 75% of dose, if bili > 5 do not give
Renal for severe renal impariment

36
Q

adverse effects of cyclophosphamide

A
Hemorrhagic cystitis* 
neutropenia
emetic potential is dose dependent
SIADH if Doses > 50mg/kg
secondary malignancy
alopecia
acute hemorrhageci myocarditis
37
Q

what causes the hemorragic cystitis by cyclosphosphamide?

A

metabolite acroline attaches to the bladder and leads to necrosis

38
Q

when does the nadir for neutropenia for cyclophosphamide occur?

A

in 8-14 days