21 - Malignancy of the Reproductive Tract Flashcards

1
Q

What are most vulval cancers and what are they caused by?

A

Squamous cell carcinoma (rare)

- Older women: long standing chronic irritation e.g lichen sclerosus and squamous hyperplasia

- Pre-menopausal: HPV 16 causing vulval intraepithelial neoplasia (VIN) which leads to SCC. 70% of vulval cancers

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2
Q

How does vulval cancer spread and how is it treated?

A
  • Locally to inguinal lymph nodes
  • Definitive surgery to remove primary tumour and nodes. Higher survial in smaller lesions
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3
Q

What is the transformation zone of the cervix?

A
  • Endocervix is glandular epithelium and ectocervix is squamous
  • Metaplasia occurs in the glandular epithelium that forms ectropion to protect from the low pH in vagina
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4
Q

What type of cancers form in the cervix?

A
  • Squamous cell carcinom in 80%
  • 15% adenocarcinoma
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5
Q

What is the cause of cervical cancer?

A
  • HPV causing infection in metaplastic squamous cells leading to increased proliferation. Works by producing E6 and E7 which inactivate p53 and Rb
  • Also can develop from cervical intraepithelial neoplasia
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6
Q

What are the different stages of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia?

A
  • Dysplasia caused by HPV that can lead to cervical carcinoma
  • CIN1 means bottom third have dyplasia and so on
  • Higher the CIN more risk for SCC
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7
Q

What are risk factors for developing CIN and what have the government put into place to try and overcome some of these risks?

A
  • Since 2008 girls aged 12-13 have been vaccinated against 4 high risk HPV’s and it lasts for 10 years
  • Vaccine protects against oral, anal, vulval and cervical cancers
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8
Q

What would you do if you had CIN1/2/3 on a cervical screening?

A

- CIN1: often regresses spontaneously, just have a follow up biopsy in a year

- CIN 2/3: Need treatment as increased risk of progression to SCC. Need large loop excision of transformation zone LLETZ

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9
Q

How does cervical screening work?

A
  • Brush used to scrape cells from transformation zone
  • Cells with abnormally large nuclei are positive and will look down microscope
  • Aim is to detect preinvasive lesion so can excise it
  • If positive will refer for colposcopy and removal of these areas by diathermy
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10
Q

Where does cervical carcinoma spread to?

A
  • Iliac and aortic nodes before wide spread dissemination
  • Can spread locally to ureters, bladder and rectum and this can cause pain and fistula formation
  • Staged using FIGO
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11
Q

What may invasive cervical cancer present as and how do we treat it?

A
  • Bleeding post coital, intermenstrual, post menopausal
  • Palpable mass
  • Can’t just do excision with invasive
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12
Q

What type of cancer forms in the endometrium and what is this cause of this?

A
  • Adenocarcinoma (most common gynaeological cancer)
  • Often in perimenopausal and older women due to unopposed oestrogen
  • Endometrial hyperplasia is a precursor for endometrioid endometrial adenocarcinoma
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13
Q

How does endometrial cancer present and what are the two different histological types?

A
  • Bleeding post menopausal or intermenstrual
  • Mass
  • Serous has worse prognosis
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14
Q

Where does endometrial carcinoma spread to?

A
  • Invades myometrium and spreads to cervix, bladder and rectum, peritoneal cavity and regional lymph nodes
  • Serous spreads transcoelomic as exfoliates form, travel through fallopian tubes and deposit on peritoneal surface
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15
Q

What type of endometrial cancer is this and why?

A
  • Serous
  • Poorly differentiated so higher grade

- Psammoma bodies (collections of calcium)

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16
Q

What type of mass is this that was found in the myometrium and what symptoms would this mass cause?

A

- Leiomyoma: benign mass of smooth muscle

  • Can be asymptomatic or heavy period, menorrhagia, infertility
  • Uterine enlargement so pressure symptoms like urinary frequency
  • Oestrogen dependent so regress after menopause
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17
Q

What is this mass found in the myometrium and how does it behave?

A
  • Leiomyosarcoma
  • Similar symptoms to fibroids but does not develop from leiomyoma
  • Spreads via blood stream as sarcoma, to lungs and then systemic
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18
Q

What are some of the symptoms for ovarian cancer and the tumour markers for this cancer?

A
  • Ca125 for diagnosis and recurrence
  • BRCA1/2 associated with high grade serous epithelial tumours. May want to do prophylatic salpingo-oophrectomy
19
Q

What are the different tumours that can occur in the ovary?

A
  • Epithelial
  • Germ cell
  • Sex cord-stromal
  • Metastases from GI, gut or mullerian epithelium e.g ovary, fallopian tube
20
Q

How can epithelial tumours of the ovary be classified?

A
  • Benign, malignant, borderline
  • Mucinous, serous, endometrioid
21
Q

What type of ovarian cancer is this and why?

A
  • Ovarian serous adenocarcinoma
  • Psammoma bodies
  • Often transcoelemic spread and diagnosed from cytology of peritoneal aspiration
22
Q

What type of ovarian cancer is this and why?

A
  • Ovarian mucinous adenocarcinoma
  • Atypical epithelial cells secreting mucin, with nucleus pushed to side
23
Q

What type of ovarian cancer is this and why?

A
24
Q

What is this ovarian tumour?

A
  • Benign
  • Would be malignant if immature tissue
25
Q

Apart from a teratoma, what are some other malignant germ cell tumours in a female and what are some markers for these?

A
  • hCG
  • AFP
  • Commonly found in testes
26
Q

What are the different sex cord tumours that can arise in the ovary and how do they present?

A
  • Sertoli-Leydig produce testosterone so breast atrophy, hirtuitism etc.
27
Q

What type of cancer of the ovary is this?

A

Kruckenberg: signet ring with foamy cytoplasm and nucleus to one side

28
Q

What are the different types of testicular cancer and what age group do they most commonly affect?

A
  • 15-34 year olds
  • Germ cell, sex cord or lymhoma
29
Q

What are some non germ cell tumours?

A
  • 95% of testicular tumours are germ cell so only 5% non
  • Sex cord stromal like Sertoli-Leydig
  • Often benign and uncommon
30
Q

Why does never having children or taking the OC pill give you a greater risk of developing ovarian cancer?

A
  • Maximal ovulations so lots of scarring and more cell proliferation so more chance of mutations
  • Also more at risk with BRCA1/2 mutations
31
Q

What are the main risk factors for testicular cancers and how is this risk reduced?

A
  • All germ cell tumours malignant and often familial predisposition
  • Cryptorchidism in 10% of cases, increasing risk in both descended and maldescended
  • Perform orchiopexy before puberty to reduce risk
32
Q

How does testicular cancer normally present and what are some investigations when this presentation occurs?

A
  • Painless mass due to intratubular germ cell neoplasia
  • Do scans and check tumour markers e.g hCG (choriocarcinoma) and AFP (yolk sac tumour)
33
Q

What are the two classifications of germ cell tumours?

A
  • Seminomas
  • Non-seminomas

50/50 for both cancers

34
Q

How do seminomas tend to act?

A
  • Peak in men aged 40-50
  • Rarely metastasise but when they do after a long time they go to iliac and paraortic lymph nodes but don’t tend to go any further
35
Q

How do NSGCT’s act?

A
  • Split into yolk sac, embryonal carcinomas, choriocarcinomas and teratomas but most contain components of two
  • Metastasise early via lymphatics and blood vessels
  • May present with the metastases and the primary tumour not palpable
36
Q

What are the characteristics of a yolk sac tumour in a male?

A
  • Common in young children and has good prognosis
  • Assoicated with rise in AFP
37
Q

What are the charactertistics of embryonal carcinomas and choriocarcinomas in a male?

A
  • Occur in young adults
  • Chorios are associated with rise in hCG
  • Mixed NSGCT’s are associated with rise in hCG and AFP
38
Q

What are the characteristics of teratomas in males?

A
  • Occur at all ages
  • Prepuberty they are often benign but post they are malignant
  • 10% of these have a rise in hCG
39
Q

How are testicular tumours treated?

A

- Radical orchiectomy

  • Seminomas then followed by radiotherapy as radiosensitive and they have a better prognosis
  • NSGCT’s have aggressive chemotherapy
40
Q

What type of cancer does this woman have and why does she have bowel obstruction?

A
  • Ovarian serous adenocarcinoma
  • Psammoma body
  • Erosions sat on the serosal surface of the bowel and invading
41
Q

What is the triple approach to investigating breast cancer?

A
42
Q

How does tamoxifen work?

A

binding to the estrogen receptor and the blocking of the proliferative actions of estrogen on mammary epithelium.

43
Q

What are some of the side effects of tamoxifen?

A

Endometrial cancer as partial agonist not anatagonist at the endometrium

44
Q

Why do you get oedema in pregnancy?

A
  • Increased fluid retention
  • Compression of vena cava leading to high hydrostatic pressure in the venous end
  • Low albumin in the blood due to increased GFR of mother