Lecture 12 Neoplasia nomenclature Flashcards
Hallmarks of Cancer
1) Evading growth supressors
2) avoiding immune destruction
3) enabling replicative immortality
4) tumor promoting inflammation
5) Activating metastasis and invasion
6) Angiogenisis
7) Genome instability
8) resisting cell death
9) Deregulating cellular energetics
10) sustaining proliferative signal
Difference between neoplastic and non-neoplastic:
non = reversible eg hypertrophy neoplastic = not reversible
Difference between benign and malignant:
benign is growing locally. malignant not.
What does cytological mean?
On a cellular level. (cyto = cell)
Cytological hallmarks of malignancy
1) pleomorphism
2) incresead nucelear/cytoplasm ratio
3) hyperchromatism
4) mitosis
5) de-differentiation (anaplasia)
Histological hallmarks of malignancy
1) Tumor
2) Infiltration
3) Necrosis
4) Ulceration
5) Bleeding
6) desmoplasia
7) Invasion
8) Metastasis
Desmoplasia:
Creation of fiberous capsule around a cancer. Activation of stromal cells,
Stroma =
The connective, functionally supportive framework of a cell, organ or tissue.
Parenchym =
Functionally active part of a tissue.
Hyperchromatism =
development of excess chromatin = more staining of blue.
Pleomorphism =
means variability in size, shape and staining of cells.
Nomenclature of cancer in epithelium:
Benign = papilloma (epitel ikke kirtel), adenoma (epitel glandular) - adenoma tubular, villous and tubulovillous.
Malignant = carcinoma
Nomenclature of cancer in mesechymal:
Benign = -oma eg lipoma (rahbdo = rod, hemangio = kar)
malignant = sarcoma eg liposarcoma
Dysplasia =
Structural changes in th eepithelium incl. abnormal architecture and loss of normal tissue polarity.
What does CIN stand for?
Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia = 1-3 depending on severity.