Lung Cancers Flashcards
Classification of lung cancer
Small cell carcinoma: contain a homegenous population of cells. Highly malignant
Non-small cell carcinoma: squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, large cell carcinoma
Slower growing
Symptoms of primary lung cancer
Unproductive cough > 3 weeks - irritation of lung parenchyma
Haemoptysis - tumour invading and bleeding into an airway
Breathlessness - central tumours occlude airway
Pain - invasion of the chest wall/pleura
Poorly resolving chest infection - bronchial obstruction
Symptoms of metastatic lung cancer (nodes)
Hoarse voice - compression of RLN
Dysphagia - tumour causes obstruction
Central chest ache - mediastinal node disease
Stridor - obstruction
Name 4 non-metastatic manifesations of lung cancer
Cachexia Clubbing Extopic PTH/ACTH production SIADH (more common in small cell) Dermatomyositis
Risk factors for lung cancer
SMOKING
Environmental: aesbestos, polycyclin aromatic hydrocarbons, radiation
Host: infection, genetics, lung disease
Staging and investigations in lung cancer
CXR - detect any obvious abnormalities
CT - indicates extent of disease
PET/CT - indicates extent of mediastinal node involvement and metastasis
Lung cancer presentations on CXR
Mass lesion Pleural effusion Hilar lymphadenopathy Collapse Consolidation
Methods used to sample suspected lung cancer
Bronchoscopy
Needle biopsy of the lung
Pleural tap (sample of pleural fluid taken from behind)
Routes of lung cancer spread
Local invasion - pleura and chest wall, mediastinum, SVC
Lymphatic: hilar, mediastinal and supraclavicular nodes
Blood: Liver, bone, brain
Treatments for lung cancer
Small cell: chemotherapy and radiotherapy due to high turnover rate
Non-small cell: surgery, slower to spread and metastasise. In patients where surgery is not possible - palliative chemo and radiotherapy
What test could you perform on a biopsy of a NSC lung cancer to aid treatment
Test for EGFR mutation. Over expressed in non-small cell cancers. Giving tyrosine kinase inhibitor improves prognosis.