Outline Of Cancer Process Flashcards

1
Q

What is cancer?

A

A mass, tumour, growth, neoplasm
Disorderly growth of epithelial cells which invade adjacent tissue and spread by lymphatic & blood vessels to other parts of the body

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2
Q

What does cancer being monoclonal mean?

A

Arise from a single cell

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3
Q

Differences between cancer and normal cells

A
Cancer:
Lots of disorderly blood vessels
Frequent mitosis
Large nucleus
Loss of contact inhibition - don’t care that they’re going into adjacent structure
Increased growth factor secretion
Increase in ONCOGENE expression - drives cancer 
Loss of tumour suppressor genes 

Normal:
Oncogene expression rare
Intermittent coordinated growth factor secretion
Presence of tumour suppression

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4
Q

Multistage carcinogenesis

A

Carcinogen - initiation - promotion - tumour growth - progression (spread)

‘Pre-clinical’ and ‘clinical’ cancers.

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5
Q

Initiation stage

A

Chemical

Physical

Viral

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6
Q

Promotion stage

A

Growth factors

Oncogenes

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7
Q

Progression

A

Metastasis

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8
Q

Chemical carcinogens

A

Chimney sweeps

Dyes - industry, hairdressers

Mustard gas - leukaemia

Alcohol& smocking, obesity - lung, head&neck (alcohol), gastrointestinal

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9
Q

Physical carcinogens

A

Ionising radiation:

Smoking, buildings

Mechanism - chromosome translocation, gene amplification, oncogene activation

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10
Q

Viral carcinogens

A

Infection

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11
Q

Oncogenes

A

Transforming genes

Positive growth regulators

Prevention of apoptosis

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12
Q

Growth factors

A

Regulate cell function and cell growth

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13
Q

Autocirne and paracrine

A

??

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14
Q

Tumour suppressor gene, P53

A

Most common: P53

Cancer cells show abnormal P53

Normally: promotes DNA repair, drives cell into apoptosis, differentiation of cells

In cancers: loses normal function, can be over-expressed

G1/S checkpoint control gene

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15
Q

Metastasis

A

Not random

Cascade of limited sequential steps

Tumour-host interactions

Survival of fittest pertains - will immune system pick things up or not?

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16
Q

Invasion& metastasis

A

Tumour invades through basement membrane

Moves into extracellular matrix/ connective tissue

Invades blood cells

Tumour cells ‘arrested’ in distant organ

Lots of things cancer cells will utilise in order to allow them to invade and metastasise

17
Q

Angiogenesis

A

Formation of new blood vessels

Key factor in maintainance and progression of malignant tumours

Tumours need to grow themselves, but also be able to grow blood vessels to grow. In cancer cells, blood vessels are very disorderly.

18
Q

Pet scans

A

Cancers ‘glow’

19
Q

VEGF

A

Vascular endothelial growth factor

20
Q

Anti-VEGF therapy

A

Stops producing blood vessels

Work sin some cancers

Ultimately causes tumour to go dormant

21
Q

Revelation of Immunotherapy

A

Not directly toxic to cancer cells

Awaken/ improve immune system using patients own immune system.

Once immune system is activated, no more drugs are needed.

Changing how we look at cancer

22
Q

PD1/ PDL-1 blockage

A

Takes cloak off of ‘immunoevasive’ cells so that immune system can ‘see’ and act on them.

23
Q

High levels of PD1 and PDL 1 do what?

A

Inhibit immune response

24
Q

What is NIVOLUMAB?

A

First PD-1 inhibitor proven to significantly improve overall survival rates.

25
Q

Why is cancer much more common in older people?

A

More life been lived, more cell repair and potential error mutations

26
Q

Is metastasis an organised process?

A

YES

27
Q

Stop the primary tumours!

A

Smoking etc.