Cervical pathology Flashcards

1
Q

Which cells of the ectocervix are scraped off in a smear sample?

A

exfoliating cells

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2
Q

Which cells in the ectocervix proliferate, divide and grow?

A

basal cells (site above basement membrane)

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3
Q

What is the transformation zone?

A

the squamo-columnar junction between ectocervical and endocervical epithelia moves position from pre-menarche in response to menarche, pregnancy and menopause.

ectocervix = squamous 
endocervix = columnar

the region between the initial and new squamo-columnar junctions = TZ

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4
Q

Describe the process of cervical erosion.

A

Exposure of delicate endocervical epithelium to acid environment of vagina leads to physiological squamous metaplasia.

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5
Q

What are nabothian follicles?

A

dilated endocervical glands that form polypoid structures.

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6
Q

Why is cervicitis a risk for infertility?

A

it can be asymptomatic but simultaneously cause silent fallopian tube damage -> infertility

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7
Q

What are some causes of cervicitis?

A

chlamydia trachomatis and herpes simplex viral infection

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8
Q

Cervical polyps are premalignant.

T/F?

A

FALSE

not premalignant; localised inflammatory outgrowth

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9
Q

What is cervical intraepithelial neoplasia?

A

Pre-invasive stage of cervical cancer occurring at TZ.

Dysplasia of squamous cells

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10
Q

What is a koilocyte?

A

squamous cell that has undergone a number of structural changes due to HPV

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11
Q

Describe the appearance of a koilocyte.

A

nuclear enlargement
irregular cell membrane
hyperchromasia
perinuclear halo/vacuolisation

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12
Q

What are some risk factors for CIN/cervical cancer?

A

persistence of high-risk HPV (16 & 18)
vulnerability of SC junction in early reproductive life (age at first intercourse, long term use of OCP, non-use of barrier contraception)
smoking (3x risk)
immunosuppression

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13
Q

What is condyloma acuminatum and what causes it?

A

Genital warts - thickened “papillomatous” squamous epithelium with cytoplasmic vacuolation (koilocytosis)
due to low risk HPV (6, 11 etc)

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14
Q

Describe the histological features of CIN.

A

Delay in maturation - basal cells occupy more of epithelium
Nuclear abnormalities - hyperchromasia, increased neocytoplasmic ratio, pleomorphism.
excess mitotic activity - situated above basal layers, abnormal mitotic forms

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15
Q

Describe CIN 1.

A

Basal 1/3 of epithelium occupied by abnormal cells. Raised no. of mitotic figures in lower 1/3; surface cells quite mature, but nuclei slightly abnormal

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16
Q

Describe CIN II.

A

Abnormal cells extend to middle 1/3.

Mitoses in middle 1/3; abnormal mitotic figures.

17
Q

Describe CIN III.

A

Abnormal cells occupy full thickness of epithelium.

Mitoses often abnormal in upper 1/3

18
Q

Describe what you might see on a smear test for CIN.

A

high nucleus: cytoplasm ratio
bigger cytoplasm with raisin-like nucleus
lots of cytoplasm = mild dyskariosis (less cytoplasm = severe)

19
Q

Pathogenesis of invasive squamous carcinoma of cervix.

A

develops from pre-exisiting CIN - HPV virus integrated into host DNA.
Most cases should be preventable by screening.

20
Q

List some symptoms of invasive cervical cancer.

A

abnormal bleeding - post-coital, post-menopausal, brownish or blood stained vaginal discharge, contact bleeding (friable epithelium)

pelvic pain
haematuria/UTI
ureteric obstruction/renal failure

21
Q

Where might a carcinoma of the cervix spread locally?

A

uterine body, vagina, bladder, ureters, rectum

22
Q

What is the timescale for a HPV infection progressing to high-grade CIN?

A

6 months-3 years

23
Q

What is the timescale for high grade CIN progressing to invasive cancer?

A

5-20 years.

24
Q

What is cervical glandular intraepithelial neoplasia (CGIN)?

A

pre-invasive phase of endocervical adenocarcinoma

more difficult to diagnose on smear vs. squamous since it could be growing in a gland

25
Q

Endocervical adenocarcinoma has a better prognosis than squamous carcinoma of cervix.
T/F?

A

FALSE

endocervical adenocarcinoma has worse prognosis vs. squamous

26
Q

Epidemiology of endocervical adenocarcinoma?

A

higher socioeconomic class
later onset of sexual activity
smoking
HPV again incriminated, esp. HPV 18

27
Q

What is vulvular intraepithelial neoplasia (VIN)?

A

bimodal disease that is often, but not always, HPV related (e.g. lichen sclerosis)
often synchronous cervical and vaginal neoplasia (CIN & VaIN)

28
Q

Describe the bimodal occurrence of VIN.

A

young women - often multi-focal, recurrent or persistent causing treatment problems

older women - greater risk of progression to invasive squamous carcinoma

29
Q

Describe vulvar invasive squamous carcinoma.

A

Can arise from normal epithelium or VIN; mostly well-differentiated (verrucous = extremely well differentiated type)
usually elderly women, ulcer or exophytic mass

30
Q

What is the most important prognostic factor in vulvar invasive squamous carcinoma?

A

spread to superficial inguinal lymph nodes

31
Q

What are the surgical treatment options for vulvar invasive squamous carcinoma?

A

radical vulvectomy and inguinal lymphadenopathy

32
Q

Patient presents with a crusting and painful rsh on her vulva that seems to be spreading out into her groin area. Pathology shows tumour cells in epidermis containing mucin.
Diagnosis?

A

Vulvar Paget’s disease

mostly no underlying cancer, tumour arises from sweat gland in skin

can spread extensively to thighs, anus etc.