bowel cancer Flashcards
what does bowel cancer apply to?
the large intestine
describe the prevalence of bowel cancer? 4
- Third most common cancer in women after breast and lung cancer
- Third most common cancer in men after prostate and lung cancer
- High incidence of bowel cancer in the western world
- Effect’s men and women equally
what are the risk factors for bowel cancer? 7
- environmental and preventable risks
- Longstanding ulcerative colitis
- Crohn’s disease
- Presence of adenoma in the large bowel
- Previous history of bowel cancer surgery
- Family history of bowel cancer
- Old age
describe how bowel cancer is an environmental disease? 4
- Individuals who migrate from a low-risk area to a high-risk area increase their risk of developing bowel cancer
- Foods rich in red meat and fat increase the risk of bowel cancer
- Foods rich in vegetables, fruit and fibre reduce the risk of bowel cancer by increasing faecal bulk and reduces transit time
- Physical activity and low BMI are associated with low risk of bowel cancer
how can a high fibre diet reduce bowel cancer? 3
- By increasing the formation of short chain fatty acids which promote healthy gut micro-organisms and reduces the proliferation of potentially neoplastic cells
- Increasing stool bulk reduces transit time and potential carcinogens in the stool have a higher contact with the bowel mucosa
- High fibre diet reduces formation of secondary bile acids which are potentially carcinogenic
what is a polyp? 6
- A polyp is a protruding growth into a hollow viscus, can be benign, adenoma or malignant
- Screening a polyp in bowel cancer is either ‘innocent’ or precancerous. If the cancer is polypoid, do not use the term polyp
- Most polyps in the large bowel are adenomas- pre-cancerous lesions and consist of dysplastic epithelium
-Dysplasia= the cells have morphological features of cancer but without the invasion of the surrounding tissue
Low grade dysplasia= early precancerous features - High grade dysplasia= advances precancerous features with a high risk of invasion if not removed
- Whether a polyp is benign (hyper-plastic), dysplastic (adenoma) or cancerous, the diagnosis can only be confirmed on microscopic examination by the pathologist
What are the pathological features of polyps? 5
- Hyperplastic consists of numerous goblet cells when compared to normal mucosa- has a lace like pattern
- Tubular adenoma has a test-tube like appearance
- Villous adenoma has a finger- tube appearance
- Tubulovillous adenoma has a mixture of tubular and villous features
- Pathology reporting= tubular adenoma with low or high grade dysplasia
what is the adenoma-carcinoma sequence? 3
- stepwise progression from normal mucosa to adenoma or cancer
- morphological features- macroscopic and histological features are also mirrored at genetic level where there are stepwise genetic alterations
- carcinoma of the bowel is a classic example of a multistep carcinogenesis both phenotypically (morphologically) and genetically
what is the evidence for the adenoma-carcinoma sequence? 7
- observational studies have shown that the most sporadic cancers which are not genetically determined arise from adenomas and this is supported by the following evidence:
- populations which have a high prevalence of adenomas have a high prevalence of cancer
- distribution of adenomas in the large bowel mirrors the distribution of bowel cancer
- peak incidence of polyps predates the development of cancer
- residual adenoma is found in most cases of early invasive cancer
- risk of cancer is directly related to the number of polyps
- programmes which follow up patents and remove adenomas reduce the incidence of bowel cancer
what is familial adenomatous polyposis? FAP? 6
- patients with FAP have hundreds to thousands to polyps in the large bowel
- a minimum of 100 polyps are required to make the diagnosis
- the polyps are dysplastic and are therefore called adenomas
- FAP is associated with 100% risk of developing cancer by the age of 30
- patients undergo prophylactic colectomy around the age of 20
- contributes to 1% of bowel cancer
describe genetics of FAP in bowel cancer? 6
- hereditary autosomal dominant condition
- the defective gene is on chromosome 5q21 known as the APC gene (adenomatous polyposis coli)
- patients acquire the first abdominal gene in utero as a germ cell mutation known as the first hit
- to develop polyps, they acquire the second genetic abnormality in the somatic cells known as the second hit
- the second hit paves the way for the development of polyps from a young age throughout the teens
- patients have no polyps at birth and require the second hit to develop polyps
describe the two hit hypothesis in hereditary and sporadic bowel cancer? 3
- in FAP the patient is born with a single genetic abnormality (first hit) and squires the second genetic abnormality (second hit) after birth to develop adenomas then cancer
- in sporadic bowel cancer the person acquires the two hits in the somatic cells to develop adenomas then cancer
- the two hit hypothesis was proposed by Knudson to explain hereditary retinoblastoma, cancer of the eye in children and is applicable to most cancers
describe what the second hit leads to? 5
- the loss of heterozygosity
- the mutation of the APC gene is important in the imitation of bowel cancer
- with one copy of the abnormal gene, the cells are heterozygous
- the loss of the second set of the normal genetic material during the second hit leads to the loss of heterozygosity of the cell wall will acquire two identical copies of abnormal genes (become homozygous for the cancer gene)
- after the second hit the cells acquire more genetic abnormalities to progress with adenoma-carcinoma sequence
what are the genetic abnormalities associated with bowel? 7
- Lynch syndrome (previously hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC))
- Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP)
- Attenuated FAP- less than 100 adenomas
- Familial colorectal cancer type X (FCCX)
- MUTYH associated polyposis (MAP)
- Serrated polyposis syndrome
- Hamartomatous polyposis syndrome
what is Lynch syndrome? 6
- Familial cancer affecting predominantly the caecum and right colon before the age of 50
- Associated with endometrial, small bowel and cancer of the urinary tract
- It is important when asking about FH of cancer, not to just concentrate on the large bowel
- LS accounts for 2-3% of bowel cancer
- Important to understand the genetics of LS because of this practical value
- Bowel cancer from young patients and advanced cancers are routinely checked for LS genetic mutations whether they have a FH of cancer or not