Lecture 20: Principles of Cancer Therapy Flashcards
Clinical presentation of cancer?
Primary tumour -local effects due to expansion, breach of epithelial surfaces, narrowing of body tubules
Metastasis -Distant effects involving lymph nodes, lungs, brain, liver or bone.
Paraneoplastic syndromes -Generalised effects due to hormonal (eg. gynamcomastia due to beta-HGC), autoimmune or undefined mechanisms.
Principles of Cancer diagnosis and investigation?
Diagnosis -pathological diagnosis, requiring a biopsy and histopathology to exclude benign pathology
Staging -Determines extent of involvement accoring to staging systems (eg. TNM system)
Functional assessment -of if the patient will actually respond/cope with the treatment.
Key questions for cancer treatment?
- Is surgucal rescection or curative treatment possible?
- what treatment modalities are required for best outome
- Are different treatment options available
Surgery?
most effective cancer treatment with 40% cured by surgery
complete excision with margin of normal tissue
(or: for diagnosis via excision biopsy, staging, local control, bypass obstruction for palliation)
Radiation therapy?
Ionising radiation mode of cell death
- energy from radiation damages DNA and generates free radicals from water.
Therapeutic radiotherapy
- External beam radiotherapy, planned according to treatment fields, dose to tumour and normal tissue.
- Is a component of curative treatment for head and neck cancer
cancer chemotherapy
Using chemicals to kill disease causing cells in the body
Rather than drug therapy: using chemicals to modulate body processes
Selective toxicity
The goal of chemotherapy
toxicity produced in the cancer cells without (or with very little) negative effect in host cells
- unique target in the pathogen
- target is structurally different in pathogen
- target is functionally different in pathogen
Therapeutic index
TI = EC50 for unwanted toxicity/EC50 for therapeutic activity
The larger the number the number the more favourable the situation
Classification of cancer chemo drugs
- alkylating agents - bind DNA (cyclophosphamide)
- antimicrotubule
- antimetabolites
- hormonal agents
- targeted therapies
- topoisomerase-interactive drugs-inhibit DNA organisation
- platinum-based drugs
- vasular targeting therapies
First order kinetics of tumour cell growth and chemotherapy
Tumour growth
- starts as one cell
- 108 before it’s clinically relevant
- 1012 before it’s lethal
Chemtherapy killing
- each dose kills a constant proportion of tumour cells
- repeated dose required
- continued after clinical dissappearance
Combination Chemotherapy
more effective than single agent
- some activity as single agent
- differing mechanisms of action
- different side-effect profiles
BEP?
Bleomycin - induces DNA breaks - lung toxicity
Etoposide - Topoisomerase II poison - bone marrow
Cisplatin - induces DNA crosslinks - peripheral nerves
Adverse effects of cancer chemotherapy?
Antiproliferative - myelosuppression, alopecia, sterility
mutagenesis - second cancers, teratogenicity
Mircotubule disturbances- peripheral neurotoxicity
sex steroid deficiency - Decreased libido, impotence, flushing
Indications for cancer chemotherapy?
CURE - high cure rates with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, testicular cancer
WITH RADIATION
- combined modality therapy for head and neck, cervical cancer
WITH SURGERY
- adjuvant chemo for node-positive breast and colorectal
PALLIATION
- improves symptoms and survival (eg. with Lung cancer)