Neoplasms 2 (new) Flashcards
what is the difference between cancer grade and cancer stage
Grade = level of differentiation
Stage = malignant neoplasm’s overall burden - size and level of invasion
which 4 features does cancer grade assess
- nuclear:cytoplasm ratio
- hyperchromasia (nuclear staining)
- pleiomorphism (variation in size and shape of cells/nuclei)
- presence of mitotic figures
G1 = well differentiated, G4 = undifferentiated/anaplastic
describe the system used to grade breast cancer
Modified Bloom-Richardson grading:
- tubule formation
- nuclear features
- mitotic activity
Determines G1-G3.
which staging system is used to describe most cancers
TNM Staging:
- T = size of primary tumour (T1-4)
- N = extent of regional node metastasis (N0-N3)
- M = extent of distant metastatic spread (M0-M1)
describe the 4 possible cancer stages according to TNM system
Stage I
- T1/2, N0, M0
- small and remains at primary site
Stage 2
- T3/4, N0, M0
- more locally advanced, no spread
Stage 3
- any T, N>1, M0
- regional metastasis
Stage 4
- any T, any N, M1
- advanced disease with distant metastasis
what are paraneoplastic syndromes
Systemic effects of a neoplasm due to increasing tumour burden, secreted cytokines, hormones, etc.
E.g. reduced appetite, cachexia, immunosuppression…
what is Trousseau’s syndrome
thrombosis due to hypercoagulability (e.g. mucin production)
name the 4 most common cancers in UK
- breast
- prostate
- lung
- bowel
which cancers are most common in children
leukaemias, CNS tumours, lymphomas
name the 4 most deadly cancers
- lung
- bowel
- breast
- prostate