Cancer of gut Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three most common cancer sites in the GI tract?

A
  • oesophageal
  • colon
  • pancreatic
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2
Q

What is epithelial cell - squamous and glandular cancer called?

A

squamous - squamous cell carcinoma

glandular - adenocarcinoma

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3
Q

What are nueroendocrine - enterochromaffin and interstitial cells of cajal cancers called?

A

enterochromaffin - carcinoid tumour

intersitial cells - GI stromal tumour

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4
Q

What is connective tissue - smooth muscle and adipose tissue cancers called?

A

smooth muscle - leiomyoma/meiomyosarcoma

adipose - lipoma

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5
Q

What are the three regions the oesophagus can be divided into?

A

cervical
middle
lower

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6
Q

What are the two main types of oesophageal cancer?

A

squamous cells

adenocarcinoma

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7
Q

Where does SCC occur, what pathway is used and which parts of the world is it common in?

A
  • Upper 2/3 of oesophagus
  • Acetaldehyde pathway
  • Forms from normal oesophageal squamous epithelium
  • More common in less developed world
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8
Q

Where does AC occur, what pathway is used and which parts of the world is it common in?

A
  • Lower 1/3 of oesophagus
  • Forms from metaplastic columnar epithelium
  • Related to acid reflux
  • More common in more developed world
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9
Q

How can acid reflux progress to carcinoma?

A

oseophagitis (inflammation) -> baretts (metaplasia) -> dysplasia -> carcinoma (neoplasm)

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10
Q

How can oesophageal cancer be identified?

A

endoscopy, OGD (oesophagogastroduodenoscopy) or gastroscopy.

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11
Q

What happens in Barrett’s oesophagus?

A

metaplasia from repeated exposure to stomach acid.

replacement of squamous cell mucosa -> columnar mucosa

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12
Q

What is the risk of cancer from Barrett’s oesophagus?

A
  • Overall risk of adenocarcinoma in Barrett’s oesophagus = 0.12%/yr.
  • Post-low grade dysplasia risk of adenocarcinoma = 0.5%/yr.
  • Post-high grade dysplasia risk of adenocarcinoma = 5-30%/yr.
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13
Q

How often is surveillance carried out in people with Barrett’s oesophagus?

A

4 biopsies every 1cm along segment
Aspirin would reduce COX2 expression

  • Barrett’s Oesophagus with no dysplasia:
    Every 3-5 years
  • Barrett’s Oesophagus with low-grade dysplasia:

Every 6 months until no dysplasia.

Barrett’s Oesophagus with high-grade dysplasia:

  • Flat –> Radio Frequency Ablation
  • Nodular –> endoscopic mucosal resection, then HALO.
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14
Q

What are the risk factors for colorectal cancer?

A
  • Age (Biggest risk factor (over 50))
  • Family history or specific inherited conditions (e.g. FAP, HNPCC, Lynch Syndrome).
  • Uncontrolled ulcerative colitis.
  • Previous polyps.
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15
Q

How does colorectal cancer progress?

A

Normal (+ mutation) -> hyper proliferative epithelium -> small adenoma (+ mutation) -> large adenoma (+ mutation) -> colon adenoma (+ small cancerous invasion)

This is not a single gene process, this is a sequence of genetic errors:
APC -> K-ras -> p53 -> 18q loss

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16
Q

What are the symptoms of colorectal cancer?

A
  • Normally totally asymptomatic (with unknown iron-deficient anaemia = 5-10% chance of cancer)
  • Change in bowel habit - e.g. diarrhoea or constipation.
  • Blood in stool:
  • Acute intestinal obstruction
17
Q

How is colorectal cancer investigated primarily?

A

colonoscopy

18
Q

How is colorectal cancer investigated and their advantages and disadvantages?

A

Abdominal x-ray:

  • Advantages: cheap, easy, quick
  • Disadvantage: Not very sensitive and specific

CT scan:

  • Advantages: quick, easy, see large lesions
  • Disadvantages: could miss small lesions, cannot take samples and cannot carry out treatment

Barium enema:

  • Advantages: quite sensitive and specific
  • Disadvantages: time insensitive, technically demanding, unacceptable for patients, very messy and they have to poo out a double cream like substance after

Colonoscopy:

  • Advantages: safe, quick, high sensitivity, able to obtain tissue
  • Disadvantages: 2 prep days of iatrogenic diarrhoea, small risk of perforation, small risk of dehydration

Virtual colonoscopy:

  • Advantages: Quick, easy, reduced bowel prep so more tolerable, good for lesions greater than 6mm
  • Disadvantages: unable to obtain tissue, unable to remove lesions
19
Q

Symptoms of early and late pancreatic cancer

A

EARLY – abdominal pain, depression, glucose intolerance

LATE – weight loss, jaundice, ascites and obstructed gall bladder.

20
Q

What is the prognosis of pancreatic cancer?

A

Prognosis is very poor

Only 20% resectable (lose all endo- and exocrine function) and surgery only curative 20-25% of cases

1-year survival rate 18%, 5-year survival rate 2%.

21
Q

Risk factors of pancreatic cancer?

A
  • Smoking
  • Drinking
  • Obesity
  • Family history
22
Q

Describe the epidemiology of colon cancer

A
  • More than 30,000 new cases per year
  • 1 case per GP per year
  • 14% of cancer in men, 12% in women
  • 1 in 25 lifetime risk
  • 1 in 50 risk of dying from CRC
23
Q

Symptoms of oesophageal cancer

A
  • Symptoms do not usually appear until >50% of the circumference of the oesophagus is cancerous.
  • Difficulty and pain when swallowing
  • Weight loss due to lack of nutrition
  • Pain in the breast bone and stomach, or a feeling of reflux

In later stages, further symptoms include:

  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Regurgitation of food
  • Vomiting blood