Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy ☺️ Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the goals of chemotherapy and radiotherapy

A

Curative - get rid of all cancer cells
Control - shrink/slow growth and spread
Relief - shrink to reduce pain, address symptoms (palliative)

Chemo

Radio
Curative - some toxicity acceptable (high dose, long course)

Palliative - min toxicity (low dose, short course)

  • SC, cauda equina compression (ONCOLOGICAL EMERGENCY)
  • bone mets - prevent fracture, pain control
  • brain mets - chemo does not pass BBB
  • obstruction/compression from large masses
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2
Q

How do they both work

  • chemo
  • radio
A

Chemo - meds circulate around bloodstream and act systemically
-can be administered in a variety of ways

Radio - high energy X-rays that aims to cause local double strand DNA breaks

  • ext beam
  • brachytherapy - temporary/permanent insertion of radioactive seeds near tumour
  • radioactive isotopes therapy - swallow isotope
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3
Q

SE

  • chemo
  • radio
A

Chemo, general SE, majority are reversible

  • fatigue
  • hair loss
  • myelosuppression => pancytopenia - anemia fatigue, easy bruising and bleeding, infection prone (neutropenic sepsis)
  • N+V+D
  • cardiomyopathy, lung, nerve damage
  • infertility - LESS REVERSIBLE
  • 2ndary cancer in future

Radio, general SE

  • dry, blistering skin inflammation at site => scarring and sensitivity
  • fatigue, stiffness
  • 2ndary cancer in future
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4
Q

Acute and late SE of radio

  • brain
  • H+N
  • chest
  • abdo
  • pelvis
A

Brain
A N+V, fatigue
L cognitive, memory problems

H+N
A  hair loss, mucositis
L  eyes, cataracts
L  dry mouth, dental problems, mandible necrosis
L  hypothyroidism

Chest
A esophagitis, pneumonitis, chest tenderness
L lung fibrosis
L ischemic, myocardial issues, pericarditis

Abdo
A N+V+D
L intestinal irritability, kidney, liver damage

Pelvis
A  diarrhoea
A  cystitis
L  proctitis
L  impotence, infertility, menopause, vaginal dryness
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5
Q

How would you manage radiotherapy patients

  • weekly review
  • symptomatic treatment
  • long term
A

Therapeutic ratio - BALANCE BETWEEN TUMOUR CONTROL AND COMPLICATIONS

Weekly review
Preventative measures
-skin care advice - gentle washing
-antiemetics (prochlorperazine)
-oral hygiene 
-dietary review - radiotherapy plan specific to current body shape and weight

Symptomatic treatment

  • loperamide - diarrhoea
  • analgesia
  • nutritional support
  • skin reaction treatment
  • rest from treatment

Follow up for late effects

  • screening for new cancers
  • treatment for any lost function (thyroxine replacement for thyroid cancer)
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6
Q

Uses of both radiotherapy and chemotherapy

A

Can be the

  • only treatment
  • multimodality treatment with surgery and chemo/radio
  • reduce recurrence
  • neoadjuvant
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7
Q

What are the 5 main groups of cytotoxic chemotherapy drugs

-how do they work?

A

Alkylating agents - crosslinking, incorrect base pairing => DS breaks

Antimetabolites - nucleotide masquerades
-affect S phase

Anti microtubule inh - target metaphase, stop the cell cycle

Cytotoxic ABx - interrupt cell division

Topoisomerase inh - supercoiling => DS breaks

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8
Q

What are the non cytotoxic chemotherapy drug types that can be used

A

Hormones

Immunoglobulins, tyrosine kinase inhbitors

  • EGFR
  • target immune checkpoints
  • can increase immune cell efficacy/increase immune surveillance
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9
Q

What is neutropenic sepsis

  • presentation
  • prophylaxis
  • management
A

7-14 days after chemo

  • neutrophils U0.5x10 9 in anticancer treatment
  • flulike (38C+, rigors, headache, aching muscles, cough, sore throat)
  • dysuria

Prophylaxis - fluoroquinolone

Management -

  • EMPIRICAL - piperacillin tazobactam
  • can add G-ve cover
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10
Q

What is tumour lysis syndrome

  • pathophysiology
  • etiology
  • investigations
  • management
A

Breakdown of tumour cells => release of K, PO4

  • PO4 binds to Ca => CaPO4 crystals => AKI
  • high K, low Ca => cardiac arrythmias
  • nucleic acids => urate => urate crystals => AKI

Chemotherapy, esp in treatment of high grade lymphomas, leukemias
Spontaneous if tumour load high

High K, PO4, urate
Low Ca

Preventative
-allopurinol (prevent urate crystal formation)/rasburicase (breakdown urate crystals)

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11
Q

Describe the function of immune checkpoint inhibitors

  • function
  • SE
A

Checkpoint inhibitors block Tcell immune surveillance (PDL1 found on cancer cells)
-reactivate, increase Tcell population to recognise and fight cancer cells

SE - all immune cells boosted => overactivity

  • dry, itchy rashes
  • N+V+D
  • fatigue, tired
  • pneumonitis => SOB, dry cough
  • myocarditis, hepatitis
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