Cancer - Prostate Flashcards

1
Q

What is the mortality of CaP? Main risk factors?

A
  • Most common cancer in men and 2nd most important cause of mortality
  • Risk factors:
    • Age
    • Family history: 4x increased risk if one degree relative diagnosed before age 60
    • BRCA2 mutation: 5-7x increased risk (don’t tend to respond to radiotherapy)
    • Other risk factors: being black, being tall and use of anabolic steroids
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2
Q

What is the presentation of CaP?

A
  • Presentation is similar to BPH (or can be asymptomatic) but can also include haematuria, erectile dysfunction and general signs of cancer and metastasis (e.g. weight loss, fatigue and bone pain)
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3
Q

What Investigations should you do when suspecting CaP?

A
  • PSA
  • DRE
  • Biopsy
  • Imaging: MRI or PET
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4
Q

What is PSA? When should it be used? Name causes of raised PSA?

A
  • Protein that liquefies semen
  • Traditionally done prior to DRE to avoid stimulating release of PSA
  • Not very sensitive or specific (positive and negative results are unreliable)
  • Most useful in monitoring the progression of the disease and success of treatment
  • Common causes of raised PSA: prostatitis, UTI, prostate cancer, BPH, acute urinary retention
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5
Q

What imaging should you perform as part of Ix for CaP?

A
  • MRI prostate pelvis: increasingly performed pre-biopsy (informs biopsy technique or can be biopsy sparing
  • If MRI done after biopsy: must wait 4-6 weeks for inflammation to settle down
  • If suspected advanced disease or patient has bone pain: PET scan – will show osteoblastic/sclerotic lesions
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6
Q

What types of biopsy can you do?

A
  • The definitive method for diagnosing prostate cancer
  • Still not particularly sensitive because cancers may be located in areas not biopsied
  • Multiple needle biopsies are taken to minimize risk of missing the cancer
  • Options:
    • Transrectal Ultrasound-Guided Biopsy (TRUS)
      • Ultrasound inserted into rectum and a needle biopsy taken through rectal wall into prostate under US guidance – local anaesthetic used
      • Usually around 10 biopsies are taken to try and pick up the cancer
    • Transperineal
      • This method allow more biopsies to be taken (around 35)
      • This has a higher sensitivity than TRUS
      • It takes longer than TRUS and requires general anaesthetic
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7
Q

Mx: what factors will influence the treatment of a patient with CaP?

A
  • Age and functional status
  • PSA
  • Biopsies: Gleason grade and extent
  • MRI (pelvis) and bone scan: N-stage and M-stage
  • DRE: T stage
    • 1-2 localised
    • 3 locally-advanced
    • 4 Advanced
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8
Q

Describe the Gleason Grading system

A
  • Specific to prostate cancer – gives score out of 10 based on the differentiation of the 2 biggest regions of tumour. Scale 0-5, 5 being very poorly differentiated.
  • Helps to determine what treatment is most appropriate
    • 6 or less: cancer likely to develop slowly
    • 7: intermediate risk for aggressive cancer 3+4 is better than 4+3 b/c means the largest area has a better (lower score on the scale)
    • 8 or higher: cancers likely to spread more rapidly – poorly differentiated and high grade
  • The higher the grade (especially in the first number) the worse the prognosis
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9
Q

Describe the treatment options for localised CaP

A

Low risk:

  • Active surveillance in low risk patients: annual DRE in clinic and PSA 2x/year

Moderate risk:

  • Radical prostatectomy: PSA <20 and BMI <35, intermediate risk (1-2 nodes) – robotic approach is now gold standard
  • Radiotherapy directed at the prostate
  • Brachytherapy
    • Radioactive seeds implanted into the prostate
    • Deliver continuous, targeted radiotherapy to the prostate
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10
Q

Describe possible complications of prostatectomy followed by radiotherapy

A
  • Erectile dysfunction
  • Urinary incontinence
  • Radiation induced enteropathy (giving gastrointestinal symptoms like PR bleeding, pain, incontinence etc)
  • Urethral strictures
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11
Q

Describe the treatment options for patients with metastatic CaP

A
  • If performance status is 0-1: can give upfront Docetaxel chemotherapy before starting hormonal treatment
  • Hormonal treatment: prostate tissue grows in response to androgens like testosterone – blockage of androgens results in slowing or halting of prostate cancer growth
    • Side effects: hot flushes, sexual dysfunction, gynaecomastia, fatigue and osteoporosis
  • Hormonal treatment options:
    • Bilateral orchidectomy is the gold standard hormonal treatment
    • LHRH agonists cause chemical castration (e.g. goserelin) – more effective in systemic/metastatic disease than androgen receptor blockers
    • Androgen receptor blockers (e.g. bicalutamide) as add on to block initial surge of androgens
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12
Q

What treatment can we provide for palliative patients with bone pain?

A
  • Single dose radiotherapy: decreases opioid use and relieve mets bone pain
  • Bisphosphonates: Zolendronic acid
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13
Q

What is the problem with a PSA based screening programme?

A
  • PSA can be raised or normal with or without CaP – PSA levels do not correlate with DRE findings
  • PSA check can lead to uncertainty and anxiety
  • PSA based screening leads to over-diagnosis (indolent/insignificant CaP) and significant loss of QALYs owing to post Dx long-term effects
  • Not cost-effective - 1 CaP death averted per 781 men invited
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14
Q

Explain lead and length time bias

A
  • Lead time bias: appearance that early diagnosis of a disease prolong survival with the disease
  • Length time bias: overestimation of survival duration due to relative excess of cases detected that are asymptomatically slow growing progressing, while fast progressing cases are detected after giving symptoms
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