Introduction to Hematologic Malignancies Flashcards

1
Q

What is the historic difference between leukemia and lymphoma?

A

Both are malignancies of hematopoietic cells, but leukemias present as cancers of the blood while lymphomas present as tumors of the lymph nodes.

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2
Q

Myeloid tumors are called ______.

A

extramedullary hematopoietic tumors or granulocytic carcinomas

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3
Q

The same type of hematologic cancers can be solid and/or fluid, for instance ________.

A

chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) can present as small lymphocytic lymphoma (SLL), or as both CLL/SLL

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4
Q

Acute means _______ and chronic means ______, loosely.

A

high grade; low grade

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5
Q

Are there benign hematologic neoplasms?

A

No, all are malignant with the exception of monoclonal gammopathy of uncertain significance (MGUS).

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6
Q

Why are chromosomal translocations thought to be common in hematologic malignancies?

A

Because the lymphocytes naturally undergo translocations (the VDJ shuffle); granulocytic translocations are not well understood.

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7
Q

List three viruses and their associated cancers.

A

Ebstein-Barr virus: Hodgkin lymphoma, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and Burkitt lymphoma. Human T cell leukemia virus 1 (HTCLV-1): adult T cell leukemia and lymphoma (ATLL). Kaposi sarcoma virus/human herpes simplex virus 8: primary effusion lymphoma.

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8
Q

Lymphoma is _______ than leukemia.

A

more frequent and deadlier

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9
Q

Myeloid malignancies arise from ______, while lymphoid malignancies arise from ______.

A

myeloid precursors (granulocytes, erythrocytes, etc.); lymphoid precursors (B cells, NK cells, T cells)

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10
Q

Leukemias can be diagnosed by ________.

A

gross morphological appearance and/or immunophenotyping

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11
Q

What is myelodysplastic syndrome, and to what malignancy does it often progress?

A

It is the overproduction and disordered growth (dysplasia) of bone marrow cells that leads to decreased production of other bone marrow lines; it often progresses to AML

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12
Q

What is MPN?

A

Myeloproliferative neoplasm – a disorder in which too many myeloid cells are made, but in which they are all functional; it rarely progresses to malignancy.

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13
Q

How are non-Hodgkin lymphoma and classical Hodgkin lymphoma different?

A

Classical Hodgkin lymphoma is a distinct set of B cells called Hodgkin-Reed-Sternberg, while non-Hodgkin lymphoma is any other kind of lymph node malignancy (B cell, T cell, or NK cell)

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14
Q

Although hematologic malignancies can develop anywhere, the most common sites are: ___________.

A

the bone marrow (for leukemias) and peripheral lymph sites (for lymphocytes)

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15
Q

What are the presenting signs of acute leukemia?

A

Low platelets (bleeding), low neutrophils (fever, infection), and low RBCs (anemia)

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16
Q

Leukemias are often blast cells, which are ______.

A

large, have a high N:C ration, and have noticeable nucleoli

17
Q

Chronic leukemia cells are generally more ______.

A

differentiated; thus, patients will have high counts of normal cells on a CBC

18
Q

High grade lymphomas are ________, while low grade lymphomas are ________.

A

rapidly enlarging lymph nodes; mildly enlarged lymph nodes

19
Q

List some risk factors for hematologic malignancies.

A

Radiation exposure, viruses, immunodeficiency, genetic disorders, DNA-damaging chemotherapy

20
Q

Lymphoma is ________ treated with surgery.

A

rarely (because of frequent metastases)