Cancer - Prostate Flashcards

1
Q

Where are most prostate cancers found?

A

Peripheral zone

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2
Q

What are the stages of prostate cancer?

A

Localized
Locally Advanced
Metastatic
Hormone Refractory (i.e. resistant to castration)

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3
Q

Risk factors for Prostate Cancer?

A

Age
African/Afro-Caribbean
Family History
High fat/processed carb diet

Drugs like Finasteride can actually REDUCE risk but increase risk of developing higher grade prostate cancer

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4
Q

How might a prostate cancer present?

A

Most present with non cancer-specific symptoms, just LUTS & UTIs

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5
Q

What symptoms would indicate an invasive prostate cancer?

A
  • Loin/perineal/suprapubic pain
  • Impotence
  • Haematuria or haemospermia
  • Renal Failure
  • Rectal Symptoms
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6
Q

What symptoms would indicate a metastatic prostate cancer?

A
  • Bone Pain or sciatica
  • Spinal cord compression (Paraplegia)
  • Lymph Node Enlargement
  • Lymphoedema
  • Loin pain/anuria (lymph nodes obstruct ureters)
  • Lethargy due to anaemia or uraemia
  • Weight loss & Cachexia
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7
Q

What is Cachexia?

A

Weakness and wasting of the body due to severe chronic illness.

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8
Q

65 yr old man presents with frequency, dysuria and slow to start urination. How would you confirm its prostate cancer?

A

Prostate/Rectal Exam - a hard, craggy prostate will be felt

TRUS-guided biopsy (Transrectal ultrasound)

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9
Q

What investigations do we do to stage prostate cancer?

A

Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA)
TRUS guided biopsy
CT pelvis, chest/abdo
MRI pelvis

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10
Q

What can cause an elevated PSA?

A

The upper limit increases with age.

Prostate cancer! But also:

  • UTI
  • Chronic prostatits
  • Instruments e.g. catheter
  • Physiological e.g. ejaculation
  • Recent urological procedure
  • BPH (not a cancer)
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11
Q

How is Prostate Cancer Treated? What are the different combinations?

A

Hormone Therapy:

  • Alone
  • Intermittent
  • Followed by Surgery
  • Followed by radiotherapy
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12
Q

Types of radiotherapy for prostate cancer?

A

External beam RT

Brachytherapy - radioactive material is inserted directly into the site

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13
Q

Major types of hormone therapy?

A

Surgical castration (Bilateral Orchidectomy)

Chemical Castration with LHRH analogue

Anti-androgens

Oestrogens

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14
Q

How does chemical castration work?

A

LHRH analogue (e.g. goserelin) downregulates androgen receptors by -ve feedback.

It causes the tumour to flare in the first week of therapy so you need combined anti-androgens

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15
Q

How do anti-androgens work?

A

Inhibit androgen receptors on the prostate

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16
Q

How do oestrogens treat prostate cancer?

A

1) Inhibit LHRH & Testosterone secretion
2) Inactivate Androgens
3) Direct cytotoxic effect on prostatic epithelium