Metastasis Flashcards

1
Q

What are metastases formed by?

A

By cancer cells that have left the primary tumour and traveled vi blood/ lymphatic vessels

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2
Q

What % of cancer deaths are caused by mestastasise?

A

90%

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3
Q

What is the linear progression model?

A

During local progression aggressive cells and selected and dissemination initiates.
-The metastatic sites are then sequentially seeded.

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4
Q

What is the parallel progression model?

A
  • Involves early dissemination (1-4mmm)

- Different organs are seeded in parallel not sequentially (unlike linear)

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5
Q

What is the metastasis cascade?

A
  • Primary tumour forms
  • Local invasion
  • Intravasation
  • Transport through circulation
  • Arrest in microvessles of various organs
  • Extravasation
  • Formation of a mcirometastasis
  • Colonization - formation of a macrometastasis
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6
Q

Briefly describe the EMT process

A
  • EPithelial cells stop expressing E-Cadherin and start expressing mesenchymal markers such as vimentin. This allows them to leave the tissue and enter the stroma.
  • Process is stimulated by factors secreted by the stroma such as TGFb and TNFa
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7
Q

What is intravasation of cancer cells stimulated by?

A

TAM (tumour associated macrophages)

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8
Q

How do cancer cell emboli protect themselves from the hostile environemtn of the blood vessel?

A

By either clumping together or by using immune cells to protect them. (the cancer cells are taken up by immune cells so they cant be broken apart)

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9
Q

What are the 2 methods of extravasation?

A

Rapid and slow
Rapid= trigger endothelial cell of vessel wall to retract, creating space for the cancer cell to extravasate.
Slow= takes days, requires proliferation and subsequent destruction of parenchyma.
(Not all tumour cells can extravasate like immune cells so they have to do it the slow way)

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10
Q

What size is a macrometastasis?

A

2mm or more

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11
Q

What are the different metastases pathways?

A
  • Transcoelomic (cancers that arise on surface of abdominal/ thoracic structures)
  • Lymphatic
  • Haematogenous (sarcomas)
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12
Q

What does metastatic tropism mean?

A

Their preference to spread to a certain tissue

-Depends on the ability of a tumour cell to adapt to the microenvironment and layout of circulation.

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13
Q

Describe bone metastases

A
  • Arrive at bone via marrow vessels
  • Adhere to specialised stromal cells coating bone facing the marrow
  • Attracted by growth factors expressed by ECM
  • Cancer cells activate osteoblasts/ osteoclasts at different extents so you can have osteolytic and osteoblastic metastases.
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14
Q

What is involved in the detection of metastases?

A
  • Physical examination

- Diagnostic imaging

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15
Q

Describe the use of thoracic radiography and metastases detection

A
  • Used to find tumour spread via the haematogenous route
  • osteosarcoma, melanoma, haemangosarcoma , mammary tumours
  • not sensitive and easily miss small ones
  • Left and right lat views and DV views needed
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16
Q

Describe the use of ultrasonography and the detection of metastases

A
  • Sensitive detection method for lesion in liver, spleen and kidneys
  • Limited use for determining nature of lesion
  • Guided biopsy helpful
17
Q

What are the implications for treatment if metastases have been found?

A

Surgical procedure MUST be followed by systematic therapy of chemo and/ or radiography.