6- Resp Pathology Flashcards
What are 6 clinical features of lung cancer
Cough Chest/Shoulder pain Chest signs Dyspnoea Hoarseness Finger clubbing
Describe TNM staging
If the tumour is closer to the mediastinum or the chest wall then it has a HIGHER T STAGING irrespective of its size
• So you T staging is based on location, size and proximity to other organs
• If the tumour spreads to the lymph nodes in the neck then there is higher staging
Describe how PEt scans are used
Patients fast for 4 hours and are then given radiolabelled glucose
• The lung as a whole is not very active but the tumour is very metabolically
active and hence show up very clearly
How does small cell and non small cells lung cancer treatments differ
Small Cell Lung cancer usually grows rapidly and metastasise early - treatment involves chemotherapy and radiotherapy
If it is localised, then the best treatment is surgery
• 5 year survival is around 70%
If there is advanced disease with lymph node involvement you’d give chemotherapy to begin with to try and reduce the extent of the spread
What are the 4 types of malignant epithelial lung tumour
Non-small cell carcinoma has THREE types:
• Squamous Cell Carcinoma (20-40%)
• Adenocarcinoma (20-40%)
• Large Cell Carcinoma (uncommon)
• Small Cell Carcinoma (20%)
• Much worse prognosis than non-small cell
• It is unusual to find an early stage small cell carcinoma because they
grow rapidly and metastasise early
What is the most common type of cancer among non smokers
Adenocarcinoma
How does a carcinoma develop
Metaplasia
- Dysplasia
- Carcinoma in situ
- Invasive carcinoma
Describe squamous cell carcinoma
Squamous cell carcinoma tends to arise in the airways
• The airway epithelium reacts to the chronic irritation of cigarette smoke - the epithelium changes to a TOUGHER squamous epithelium
Accounts for 25-40% of lung cancer
Describe adenocarcinomas
Forms from glandular epithelium
• Tend to develop in the periphery and are increasing in incidence because of deeper inhalation of cigarette smoke and because it is more common in non- smokers
25-40% of lung cancer
What are the 2 molecular pathways associated with adenocarcinoma and why is this significant
Smoker = K ras mutation (DNA methylation + p53)
• Non-Smoker = EGFR mutation/amplification (Epidermal Growth
Factor Receptor)
• If the patient has a K ras mutation then they ARE NOT going to respond to targeted therapy (like Tarceva)
Describe large cell carcinoma
Poorly differentiated tumours composed of LARGE
cells
• NO histological evidence of glandular or squamous
differentiation
Describe small cell carcinoma
Cells are small with basically just nuclei
20-25% of all lung cancer
• Often central near the bronchi
• Very close association with SMOKING
• 80% of cases present with advanced disease
• Although very chemosensitive - there is an awful
prognosis
What is Mesothelioma
Malignant pleural tumour due to asbestos exposure, essentially fatal
What is the 5 year survival rate of lung cancer
Less than 6%
What is a paraneoplastic syndrome and give examples
Paraneoplastic Syndrome = systemic effect of tumour due to abnormal expression by tumour cells of factors (e.g. hormones) NOT normally expressed by the tissue from which the tumour arose
Anti-diuretic hormone (ADH)
• You can get syndrome of inappropriate ADH (SIADH) causing
hyponatremia (especially in small cell carcinoma)
• Adrenocorticotropic Hormone (ACTH)
• Cushing’s Syndrome (especially in small cell carcinoma)