Colorectal Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

6 Modifiable Risk Factors

A
obesity
physical inactivity 
high red meat/processed meat diet 
alcohol
smoking
very low fruit/veggie intake
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2
Q

6 Non-Modifiable Risk Factors

A
age
family or personal hx polyps
UC/Chron's
inherited genetic disorders (FAP, Lynch, type 2 DM)
family hx colorectal cancer
H pylori or other infections
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3
Q

Chromosomal Instability

A
  • Changes in # chromosomes or major structural chromosomal changes in tumor cells
  • Adenocarcinoma sequence
  • Mutations: APC (beta-catenin degradation), KRAS (oncogene), TP53 (tumor supp gene), chromosome 18q loss, SMAD4
  • APC inc risk of polyps –> KRAS mutation leads to polyp formation –> p53 causes transformation to cancer
  • Worse prognosis
  • Familial adenomatous polyposis (APC mutation from birth)
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4
Q

Microsatellite Instability

A
  • Deficiency of mismatch repair system - inability to properly copy microsatellites (repeated DNA sequences)
  • Usually not in adenomas
  • Mutations: Wnt signaling, BRAF (oncogene), CpG island methylator phenotype
  • Better prognosis
  • Lynch Syndrome (HNPCC - hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer); also inc risk of ovarian and endometrial cancer
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5
Q

Staging

A
  • T = invasion
    • T0 - carcinoma in situ
    • T1 -invades submucosa
    • T2- invades muscularis propria
    • T3- invades subserosa and beyond
    • T4- perforation and invasion into adjacent organs
  • N = nodes
    • N0 - none
    • N1 - 1 to 3 nodes
    • N2 - 4+ nodes
  • M = mets
    • M1 is any (automatically stage IV if mets)
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6
Q

Most Common Mets in Colon v. Rectal Cancer

A

Colon = liver

Rectal = lungs

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7
Q

Presentation

A
  • Often asymptomatic and found via screening or incidental imaging
  • Primary Symptoms - obstructs lumen –> blood in stool and anemia; pain if extend into parietal peritoneum; fistula manifestations (ex - if bladder fistula then frequent UTIs or feces in urine)
  • Systemic Symptoms - wt loss, fever, anorexia, ab pain
    • Signs of mets - ex) jaundice if liver mets
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8
Q

CEA

A
  • (carcinoembryonic antigen)

- high levels mean poor prognosis and can be used to monitor recurrence and treatment response (NOT USED FOR SCREENING)

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9
Q

When is preventative surgery indicated?

A

FAP

or UC w/ dysplasia

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10
Q

Treatment (by stage and in rectal cancer specifically)

A
  • If lower stages … endoscopic removal OR surgically removed (resect blood supply and regional nodes too)
    • If rectal cancer then resect entire rectal mesentery
  • If stage III - use adjuvant chemo after surgery (Fluorouracil 5-FU based)
  • If stage II - less clear whether to use adjuvant chemo
  • If Stage IV (mets) - may or may not resect
    • If lots of mets but colon cancer itself is not causing symptoms then may not resect (no known benefit)
    • If colon cancer itself is obstructing and causing symptoms then may resect b/f starting chemo
    • If unsuitable for surgery there is poor prognosis but use FOLFOX4 + bevacizumab
  • Rectal cancer - often give radiation and chemo b/f surgery (neoadjuvant) to reduce chances of recurrence later
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11
Q

FOLFOX4 (3 components + how ea works)

A

5-FU + oxaliplatin + folinic acid

  • Oxaliplatin is a platinum complex that forms crosslinks in DNA –> disruption of DNA replication and transcription
  • Folinic acid stabilizes 5-FU’s binding to thymidylate synthase
  • 5-FU (5-fluorouracil) - pyrimidine analogue
    • Converted to FdUMP which inhibits thymidylate synthase –> less dTMP needed for DNA synthesis
    • Converted to FUTP which is incorporated into RNA to interfere w/ function
    • Converted to F-dCTP which is incorporated into DNA to interfere w/ function
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12
Q

Bevacizumab

A
  • monoclonal ab against VEGF (improves survival when added to FOLFOX4)
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