Female Genital Tract Flashcards
Non-neoplastic Vulvar Diseases
Infections (e.g. HPV)
Various dermatologic conditions
Neoplastic
Pre-cancerous changes
Cancers:
Squamous cell carcinoma (most common)
Other neoplasms (much less common)
Human Papillomavirus (HPV)
STI which infects squamous cells
Multiple HPV subtypes:
Low risk strains (e.g. 6, 11):
Condyloma (genital warts)
Rarely progress to anything concerning
High risk strains (e.g.16, 18):
Pre-cancerous changes
Cause squamous cells to proliferate (progress to cancer)
Risk factors of HPV
Behavioral based
Young age of first intercourse
Multiple sexual partners
Unprotected intercourse
Smoking
Biological based
Host factors
Immune response, etc.
Viral factors
HPV type, viral load, etc.
Weakened immune system
Vulvar Condyloma Accuminatum
Genital warts
Halo
“Raisins in a cage”
Cells grow more rapidly
In normal cells, there is a granular layer where cells fall apart (no nuclei in the keratin)
If grows too quickly, cells will fall into the keratin layer before getting rid of the nucleus
HPV-6 and HPV-11
Usually multiple
Recurrence common
30-50% associated cervical infection
Vulvar Intraepithelial Neoplasia (VIN)
Mostly squamous cell carcinoma
Preceded by pre-cancerous changes
Same as HPV risk factors
HPV associated (high risk viral strains)
Younger age
Multifocal disease
Recurrent
Non-HPV (p53 mutation)
Older age
Solitary lesions (not multifocal)
Linked to chronic inflammatory lesions
Higher risk of progression to invasion
Normal → high grade mutation (high grade VIN) → cancer
Mitosis should only be at the BASE - if this is occurring above, it is abnormal growth
You want to excise it before it progresses to cancer
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
There appear to be two distinct forms of vulvar squamous cell carcinomas that differ in pathogenesis and course.
1. The less common form is related to high-risk HPV strains and occurs in middle-aged women, particularly cigarette smokers.
a. This form is often preceded by precancerous changes in the epithelium termed vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia (VIN).
2. A second form of squamous carcinoma occurs in older women, sometimes following a long history of reactive epithelial changes, principally lichen sclerosus.
a. It is preceded by a subtle lesion, differentiated vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia (dVIN).
b. If left untreated it may give rise to HPV negative, well-differentiated, keratinizing squamous cell carcinoma.
Cervix
Lined by simple squamous epithelium
The cervix is a cylinder-shaped neck of tissue that connects the vagina and uterus.
Located at the lowermost portion of the uterus, the cervix also is the site of one of the most common cancers in women worldwide.
Transformation zone of cervix
During development, the columnar mucus-secreting epithelium of the endocervix is joined to the squamous epithelial covering of the exocervix at the cervical os.
During puberty, some columnar epithelium becomes visible on the exocervix and these exposed columnar cells eventually undergo squamous metaplasia, forming a region called the transformation zone, where tumours most commonly arise.
Diseases in the cervix
HPV infection in 99% of cases
Most HPV infections transient (can clear on their own)
Persistence in 10%
High risk HPV can integrate into host genome and drive cancer development
Cervical neoplasia preventable
HPV vaccine (main risk factor)
Condom use
Regular screening (pap smear)
PAP TEST
Transformation zone sampled
Area is more susceptible to infection
Most lesions pre-cancerous for years
Allows for early detection
Simple, inexpensive
High specificity, lower sensitivity
Not perfect for getting cells on a single test (test done periodically)
HPV DNA analysis can help guide management
PAP smear slides
Low grade squamous - raisins in a cage; squamous cells
High grade squamous - less mature cells; no cage but raisins still present; squamous cells
Adenocarcinoma - atypical columnar cells (not squamous)
Colposcopy Clinic for the cervix
High grade squamous atypia
Persistent atypia
Atypical glandular lesions
Squamous cancer
Low grade - good chance of clearing
High grade - more intensive treatment at a colonoscopy clinic
Cervical biopsy to establish diagnosis
Precancerous lesion vs. invasive cancer
Squamous cell carcinoma (90%)
Often asymptomatic; may have post-coital spotting
Conservative treatment if minimal depth of invasion
Colposcopy (local excision) for microscopic disease
Advanced cancer can cause urinary
obstruction/impairment of kidney function
Treatments for the cervix
Cone biopsy
Hysterectomy
Radiation
Endometrium
The endometrium of the uterus consists of glands and stroma which makes up the innermost lining of the uterus.
Some pathologies under hormone influence
Ovarian cycle phases
- Proliferative phase
a. Actively growing endometrium - Secretory phase
a. Spike of hormones
b. Estrogen drops off
c. Progesterone comes in - Menstrual phase
a. Hormones drop off if not used