Neoplasia 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the most lethal features of a malignant neoplasm

What do they lead to

A

Invasion and metastasis, lead to increased tumour burden

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2
Q

Define Invasion and Metastasis

A

Invasion: Breach of basement membrane with progressive infiltration and destruction of the surrounding tissues

Metastasis: Spread of tumour to sites that are physically discontinuous from the primary tumour

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3
Q

What are the 3 steps taken by a tumour in the process of Invasion and Metastasis

What must the cell do at all points?

A
  1. Grow and invade at the primary site
  2. Enter a transport system and lodge at the secondary site
  3. Grow at the secondary site to form a new tumour (colonisation)

Cells must evade immune destruction

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4
Q

What 3 things must be altered for Invasion to occur?

What happens to the cell as it makes these alterations?

A
  • Adhesion
  • Stromal Proteolysis
  • Motility

Epithelial to mesenchymal transition (takes on a phenotype more akin to a mesenchymal/ stromal cell than an epithelial cell)

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5
Q

Describe how Adhesion is altered for Invasion of a tumour to occur in 2 ways

A
  1. Reduction in E-Cadherin expression

2. Changes in Integrin expression

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6
Q

Describe how Stromal Proteolysis is altered for Invasion of a tumour to occur in 2 ways?

What happens to nearby non-neoplastic cells? What do these cells form?

A
  • Altered expressions of proteases, mainly MMPs (Matrix metalloproteinases)
  • Degrade basement membrane and stroma to allow for invasion
  • Malignant cells take advantage of nearby non-neoplastic cells, which provide growth factors and proteases

Non-neoplastic cells form a Cancer Niche

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7
Q

Describe how Motility is altered for Invasion of a tumour to occur in 1 way?

A

Changes in actin cytoskeleton

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8
Q

By what 3 routes does a tumour spread to distant sites?

A
  • Blood
  • Lymph
  • Transcoelomic (Fluid in body cavities)
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9
Q

What is the greatest barrier to successful metastasis?

A

Failed colonisation of tumour at secondary site

(Most malignant cells lodge at secondary sites as tiny clinically undetectable cell clusters that either die or fail to grow into detectable tumours)

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10
Q

What are Micrometastases?

What do they cause?

A

Surviving microscopic deposits of malignant cells lodged at secondary sites, that fail to grow

Cause relapse of a malignant neoplasm

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11
Q

What is Tumour Dormancy?

A

The presence of many metastases in an apparently disease-free person

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12
Q

What 2 things determine the site of a metastasis

A
  • Regional drainage of blood/ lymph or coelomic fluid

- ‘Seed and soil’ phenomenon

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13
Q

What is the “Seed and soil phenomenon’?

What can it explain?

A

The interactions between malignant cells and local tumour environment (the niche) at the secondary site

May explain the unpredictable distribution of blood-borne metastases

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14
Q

How do Carcinomas and Sarcomas spread to distant sites?

A

Carcinomas;

  • Via Lymphatics first
  • Via blood

Sarcomas;
- Via blood

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15
Q

What are the 4 common sites of blood-borne metastases

A
  • Lung
  • Bone
  • Liver
  • Brain
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16
Q

List the 5 common neoplasms that most frequently spread to bone

A
  • Breast
  • Bronchus
  • Kidney
  • Thyroid
  • Prostate
17
Q

Describe the majority of bone metastases

Describe the bone metastases caused by prostate cancer

A

Osteolytic lesions due to destruction of bone tissue

Osterosclerotic, as production of disorganised abnormal bone is increased

18
Q

What do we mean by “ Malignant tumours have personalities”

A

Some malignant neoplasms are more aggressive and metastasise very early

(Small cell carcinoma of bronchus presents early with widespread systemic metasteses, Basal cell carcinoma of skin almost never metastasises)

19
Q

What is the likelihood of metastasis related to

A

Related to size of primary neoplasm

20
Q

What are 3 ways tumours can avoid the immune system?

A
  • Loss of/ reduced expression of histocompatabilty antigens
  • Expression of factors that suppress the immune system
  • Failure to produce tumour antigen
21
Q

Identify 5 local effects of Neoplasms

A
  • Raised pressure (tumour growth or swelling)
  • Compression of adjacent structures
  • Obstruction of tubes and orifices
  • Ulceration at surface leading to bleeding
  • Direct invasion and destruction of normal tissue
22
Q

List 12 systemic effects of Neoplasms

A
  • Cachexia (Weakness and wasting of body)
  • Malaise
  • Immunosuppression
  • Thrombosis
  • Hormone production (by endocrine tumour)
  • Neuropathies
  • Skin problems (Pruritus, abnormal pigmentation)
  • Fever
  • Clubbing
  • Myositis (Any condition causing muscle inflammation)
  • Hypercalcaemia (most common)
  • Paraneoplastic Syndromes
23
Q

What is a Paraneoplastic Syndrome? (Affect 10% of people with cancer)

A

A set of signs and symptoms in a cancer patient, that can’t readily be explained by the anatomical distribution of the tumour OR by the production of hormones from the tissue in which the tumour arise

24
Q

What are 3 significant things about Paraneoplastic syndromes

A
  • May be the earliest manifestation of an occult neoplasm
  • Can mimic metastatic disease
  • Can confound treatment
25
Q

What is an occult neoplasm?

A

A metastatic tumour whose primary site can’t be identified