Neoplasia Flashcards
features of a benign neoplasia (4)
slow growth, often well circumscribed, well differentiated cells, unable to metastisize
features of malignancy (6)
locally invasive, destructive growth, poorly circumscribed, often induce desmoplasia(connective tissue growth) to stroma, variable differentiation (well, moderate, poor, anaplastic), potential to metastisise
3 ways for metastises to spread
lymphatic, haematogenous and transcoelomic
compared to normal cells, neoplastic cells tend to demonstate? (2)
cytological atypia and architectural disorganization
give 6 examples of cytological atypia. how does this differ from benign
larger nuceli, pleomorphic(many shapes) nuclei, coarser nuclear chromatin, hyperchromatic nuclei, larger more prominent nucleuoli, abnormal mitotic divsion.
Benign have less atypia
basis of tumour terminology (excluding exceptions)
prefix denotes lineage (eg adeno for gland).
Suffix for benign is oma.
Malginant: carcinoma = epithelial. sarcoma = mesenchymal
whats deoes leiomyo denote?
smooth muscle
what do grade and stage refer to in grading?
grade = differentiation and stage = size
4 main types of cancer. difference in treatment
Non small cell Carcinoma - SCC, adenocarcinoma, large cell (undifferentiated) carcinoma.
Small cell Carcinoma.
Small cell needs chemo, rest removed surgically
3 ways mutations occur. give examples where appropriate
carcinogenic agents (chemicals, smoking, UV light, Radiation, Viruses/Bacteria). Inherited - (TSG p53 abnormality, defective DNA repair) Normal mistakes made in normal DNA replication not being repaired
what is the only example of a single gene cancer. Explain.
retinoblastoma.
gene is a tumour suppressor gene. A cell can function normally with only one functional copy of a tumour suppressor gene. In this case of one mutant copy of the gene is inherited and the second copy mutates after birth in one cell i.e. there is loss of heterozygosity. The affected cell can then start to profilerate abnormally, as there is loss of suppression of cell division.
4 classes of genes are principally involved in mutations that cause cancer. what are they?
growth promoting proto-oncogenes
Growth inhibiting tumour suppressor gene
genes that regulate apoptosis
genes that regulate DNA repair
dif b/w proto-oncogenes, oncogenes and oncoproteins?
PO = normal genes that promote cell proliferation.
Oncogenes = mutant proto-oncogenes that function autonomously - dont need growth signalling.
Oncoproteins - proteins encoded by oncogenes
what is TSG p53. what are its functions (3)?
Tumour suppressor Gene - guardian of the genome.
its function is to Respond to particular cellular stress via - DNA Repair, apoptosis, cell cycle arrest