Pathology Flashcards
Acanthyocytes
Spiculated RBCs
Hyposplenism, liver disease, Abetalipoproteinaemia
Basophilic RBC stippling
Accelerated erythropoiesis or defective Hb synthesis -> small rRNA dots on periphery.
Lead poisoning, megaloblastic anaemia, MDS, liver disease, Hbopathy
Burr cells
aka echinocyte (irregularly shaped)
uraemia, GI bleed, stomach Ca
Heinz bodies
Inclusions in RBCs
G6PD deficiency
Also chronic liver disease
Associated with Bite cells as liver takes a bite out of RBC to remove Heinz body
Howell-Jolly body
Basophilic nuclear remnants
Hyposplenism (or post-splenectomy).
Also megaloblastic anaemia, hereditary spherocytosis.
Leucoerythyoblastic anaemia
nucleated RBCs and primitive WBCs in peripheral blood
Due to marrow infiltration - myelofibrosis, malignancy
Pelget Huet cells
Hyposegmented PMNs
Congenital
- lamin B receptor mutation
Acquired
- MDS
- myelogenous leukaemia
Right shift
Hypersegmented PMNs (>5)
Megaloblastic anaemia, uraemia, liver disease
Rouleaux
Red cells stack together due to hyperviscosity.
Myeloma, paraproteinaemia, chronic inflammation.
Schistocytes
Fragmented RBCs
MAHA - DIC, TTP, HUS
Pre-eclampsia
Stomatocytes
Rod like RBCs with central pallor. ‘Smiling face’ or ‘Fish mouth’ appearance.
Hereditary stomatocytosis
High alcohol intake + liver disease
Target cells
aka codocytes
Bull’s eye appearance in central pallor.
3H's - hepatic pathology - hyposplenism - Hbopathies - thalassemia (IDA)
Pencil cells
IDA
Causes of microcytic anaemia
FAST
Fe-deficiency
ACD
Sideroblastic anaemia
Thalassemia
Causes of macrocytic anaemia
Megaloblastic:
- B12 or folate
- cytotoxic anti-folate drugs: phenytoin
Non-megaloblastic:
- Alcohol excess or liver disease
- Reticulocytosis - eg. 2nd to haemolysis
- Hypothyroidism
- Pregnancy
Other haem disorder:
- MDS
- myeloma
- myeloproliferative disorders
Plummer-Vinson syndrome triad
IDA + dysphagia + oesophageal webs
Treatment for sideroblastic anaemia
Remove underlying cause (MDS, chemo, irradiation, alcohol excess, lead excess, anti-TB drugs, myeloproliferative)
Pyridoxine (vitamin B6) - promotes RBC production, reducing ineffective erythropoiesis.
Iron, TIBC and Ferritin in:
IDA
Iron - Down
TIBC - Up
Ferritin - Down
Iron, TIBC and Ferritin in:
ACD
Iron - Down
TIBC - Down
Ferritin - Up (acute phase protein)
Iron, TIBC and Ferritin in:
Sideroblastic anaemia
Iron - Up
TIBC - N
Ferritin - Up
Pernicious anaemia serology
Parietal cell autoAb - 90%
IF autoAb - 50%
Hereditary spherocytosis inheritance pattern
AutoD
25% recessive or de novo
Hereditary spherocytosis mutations
Vertical cytoskeleton
Band 3 - Protein 4.2 - Ankyrin - B spectrin
Hereditary spherocytosis tests
Osmotic fragility - increased lysis in hypotonic solution
DAT -ve
Spherocytes on blood film
Hereditary elliptocytosis mutations
Horizontal cytoskeleton
a-spectrin - B-spectrin - protein 4.1
AutoD (except hereditary pyropoikilocytosis = autoR)
G6PD inheritance
X linked
Management of acute haemolysis
Folate Avoid precipitant Transfusion Immunisation vs BBVs ?cholecystectomy Splenectomy. - prophylaxis vs encapsulated bacteria.
Precipitants of oxidative stress if G6PDD
Drugs - antimalarials (primaquine), antibiotics (sulphonamides) Favism (aflatoxin) Acute stressors Moth balls Acute infection
Pyruvate kinase inheritance
AutoR
Does splenic sequestration occur more in adults or children with sickle cell disease
Children.
By adulthood it becomes atrophic.
Diagnosis of Sickle cell disease
Blood film - sickle cells, target cells, boat cells, Howell-Jolly bodies
Sickle solubility test
Hb electrophoresis
Guthrie test at birth
Types of B thalassemia
Absent (B0) or Reduced (B-) B chains, excess a chains
B-thalassemia minor - heterozygous B-/B; B0/B
B-thalassemia intermedia - B-/B-; B0/B
B-thalassemia major - homozygous B0/B0 (infant presentation)
Type of mutation in B thalassemia
point mutation
Type of mutation in a thalassemia
deletion
Types of A thalassemia
Reduced a chain (4 genes), excess B chains
a-thalassemia trait - 1/2 deleted: asymptomatic
HbH disease - 3 deleted: moderate anaemia + splenomegaly
Hydrops fetalis - 4 deleted: lethal
Signs of B thalassemia
Anaemia - severity increases with number of mutations
Skull Xray - skull bossing, maxillary hypertrophy, hairs on end skull
Hepatosplenomegaly
Donath-Landsteiner antibodies
Paroxysmal cold haemoglobinuria
Rare AIHA.
Usually affects children in acute setting after an infection. Sudden haemoglobinuria and jaundice after exposure to cold temperatures.
Donath-Landsteiner Abs = IgG autoAb vs RBC surface Ags.
Increasing intravascular haemolysis at low temperatures.
Type of Ig in Warm AIHA
IgG
WarminG
Type of Ig in Cold AIHA
IgM
I’M cold
Causes of warm AIHA
Idiopathic - mainly
Lymphoma
CLL
SLE
methyldopa
Causes of cold agglutinin disease
Primary idiopathic
Lymphoma
Infections - EBV, mycoplasma
Ham’s test
Paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria
A pig a night with red urine.
Test - in vitro acid-induced lysis
TTP pentad of symptoms
1) MAHA
2) Fever
3) Renal impairment
4) Neuro abnormalities
5) Thrombocytopenia
Vascular defects: causes of
Congenital
- Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome (HHT)
- CTD: Ehlers-Danlos, pseudoxanthoma elasticum
Acquired
- senile purpura
- scurvy
- infection
- steroids
Haemophilia A inheritance
X linked recessive
fVIII deficiency. (intrinsic pathway - APTT prolonged)
Haemophilia A management
avoid NSAIDs and IM injections
Desmopressin - increases vWF release which is fVIII carrier
fVIII replacement
Treatment of ITP
> 50,000 platelets - none
20-50,000 platelets + bleeding - steroids + IVIg
<20,000 + bleeding - steroids + IVIg + admission
Vitamin K deficiency causes
Warfarin
Malabsorption/malnutrition
Abx therapy - alters gut flora that produces vitamin K
Biliary obstruction
Antidote to heparine
Protamine sulphate
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
Ab vs. heparin bound to platelets.
Assoc. w/ older heparins.
Treat w/ fondaparinux.
Treatment of INR 5-8, no bleed.
Withold few doses, reduce maintenance.
Restart when INR <5
Treatment of INR 5-8, minor bleed.
Stop warfarin.
Slow vitamin K po.
Restart when INR<5
Treatment on INR >8
Stop warfarin
Vitamin K po/IV
If major bleed - PCC, FFP
% Blasts in acute leukaemia
Blasts >20%
Gum hypertrophy differential
Acute leukaemia
Drugs - cyclosporin, phenytoin, amlodipine
Auer rods
AML
ALL chemo regimen
Remission induction - High dose agents often given steroids
Consolidation - High dose multi drug chemo
CNS treatment - intrathecal chemo
Maintenance - 2y in girls, 3y in boys (increased risks of testicular recurrence)
PML mutation
t(15;17): PML-RARA (retinoic acid receptor)
PML (M3 AML) treatment
All-trans retinoid acid
(or arsenic)
- neurotoxicity risk
3 Phases of CML
Chronic Phase
- 10% blasts
- nearly 80% progress to this phase
- manifestations such as splenomegaly
Blast Phase
- > 20% blasts
- resembles acute leukaemia
CML treatment
Oral hydroxyurea/interferon - suppresses WCC
Imatinib TKi - >95% 5 year survival
Dasatinib/nilotinib for resistance
(BMT, allogeneic SCT)
Evan’s syndrome
AIHA + ITP
assoc. w/ CLL
Richter’s transformation
Progression of CLL to lymphoma (DLBC)
Occurs in 3%
Smear cells
CLL
Reed-Sternberg cell
Hodgkin’s lymphoma
Owl eyed cells with that is bi/multinucleate.
Ann Arbor staging for lymphomas
Stage 1 - one LN region (can include spleen)
Stage 2 - 2 or more LN regions, same side of diaphragm
Stage 3 - 2 or more LN regions, opposite sides of diaphragm
Stage 4 - extranodal sites (liver, BM)
A: No constitutional symptoms
B: Constitutional symptoms
Hodgkin’s lymphoma Chemo combination
ABVD
Adriamycin
Bleomycin
Vinblastine
Dacarbazine
Pel-Ebstein fever
Hodgkin’s lymphoma
cyclical 1-2 week fever. Rarely seen.
Pain in lymph nodes after drinking alcohol.
Hodgkin’s lymphoma
Alemtuzumab
anti-CD52 (aka CamPath)
Use in CLL and T cell lymphomas
Also approved for use in MS.
3 types of Burkitt’s lymphoma
1) Endemic
- EBV-associated
- Equatorial Africa. P. falciparum wears down immune system vs EBV.
- Jaw involvement
2) Sporadic
- EBV-associated
- Out of Africa
3) Immunodeficiency
- Non-EBV associated
- HIV/post-transplant pts.
Starry sky appearance on histology
Burkitt’s lyphoma
Translocation in Burkitt’s
t(8; 14) - c-myc overexpression
Translocation in Mantle cell lymphoma
t(11; 14) deregulation - cyclin D1 deregulation.
Aggressive lymphoma
Translocation in Follicular lyphoma
t(14;18)
Chronic Ag stimulants leading to MALT
H.pylori -> gastric MALT
Sjogren’s -> parotid lymphoma
Ig in Multiple Myeloma
IgG
5 solid tumours that metastasise to bone
Lytic
1) breast
2) thyroid
3) renal
4) lungs
Sclerotic
5) Prostate
Clinical, Plasma cell and Monoprotein for Multiple myeloma
CRAB
> 10% plasma cells
> 30g/L monoprotein
Clinical, Plasma cell and Monoprotein for MGUS
no CRAB
<30g/L monoclonal paraprotein
Clinical, Plasma cell and Monoprotein for Smouldering myeloma
no CRAB
> 10% plasma cells
> 30g/L monoprotein
Ig in Waldenstrom’s
IgM
Lymphoplasmacytoid cell
Waldenstrom’s Macroglobinaemia
Apple green birefringence on congo red stain
Amyloidosis
Fanconi anaemia
AutoR
Paediatric: 5-10y
Pancytopenia. Skeletal abnormalities (radii + thumbs). Renal malformation. Microopthalmia. Short. Skin pigmentation.
Dyskeratosis congenita
X linked
Telomere shortening
TRIAD: skin pigmentation + nail dystrophy + oral leukoplakia.
Also BM failure
Schwachmann-Diamond syndrome
AutoR
PRoPoSe
- Pancreastic insufficiency
- Recurrent infection
- Pancytopenia
- Skeletal abnormalities
Neutrophilia
Diamond-Blackfan syndrome
Pure RED cell aplasia.
Neonatal/infant presentation.
AutoR
Paediatric: 5-10y
Pancytopenia. Skeletal abnormalities (radii + thumbs). Renal malformation. Microopthalmia. Short. Skin pigmentation.
Fanconi anaemia
X linked
Telomere shortening
TRIAD: skin pigmentation + nail dystrophy + oral leukoplakia.
Also BM failure
Dyskeratosis congenita
AutoR
PRoPoSe
- Pancreastic insufficiency
- Recurrent infection
- Pancytopenia
- Skeletal abnormalities
Neutrophilia
Schwachmann-Diamond syndrome
Mutation in polycythemia rubra vera
JAK2 (V617F) - point mutation.
Activation of STAT pathway leading to cellular proliferation.
Aquagenic pruritus + peptic ulcers + gout + erthromelagia
Polycythemia rubra vera
Aquagenic pruritus - contact with hot water -> histamine release
Histamine -> peptic ulcer
Erythromelagia (red, painful extremities) and gout due to hyperviscosity.
Treatment for PRV
Venesection - keep haematocrit <45%
Hydroxycarbamide - cytoreductive therapy for maintenance.
Aspirin - reduce thrombosis risk
Tear-drop poikilocytes
Myelofibrosis
aka dacrocytes
Dry tap BM trephine
myelofibrosis.
Fibrotic replacement of BM. High reticulin.
Anagrelide treatment
Used in essential thrombocythemia.
Reduces formation of plts from megakarocytes.
Used in conjunction with aspirin (anti-thrombotic) and hydroxycarbamide (cytoreductive).
Ig in haemolytic disease of the newborn
IgG. Only it can cross the placenta.
Blueberry muffin rash
Congenital rubella
Charcot-Leyden crystals
Eosinophilic proliferation associated with allergic conditions - ASTHMA, parasite infections, ascariasis
Curschmann’s spirals
Spiral mucus plugs in sputum associated with asthma
Clinical diagnosis of chronic bronchitis
Chronic productive cough for most days of the 3 months in the last 2 years.
Histological diagnosis of emphysema
Permanent loss of alveolar parenchyma distal to the terminal bronchiole.
Causes of bronchiectasis
1) Congenital
- CF, immunodeficiency syndromes, Kartagener syndrome
2) Infectious (necrotizing pneumonia)
- bacteria: TB, S. aureus, H. influenzae, Pseudomonas
- viruses: adenovirus, Flu, HIV
- fungi: aspergillus
3) Bronchial obstruction: foreign bodies, tumour,
4) Other: RA, SLE, IBD, Post-transplant
4 types of emphysema
1) centriacinar - smoking
2) panacinar - a1AT deficiency
3) distal acinar - adjacent to fibrosis and atelectasis. Cause of spontaneous pneumothorax
4) Irregular - irregular acinar involvement with fibrosis
Complications of chronic bronchitis
Recurrent infections (most common cause of admission and death)
Chronic hypoxia
Pulmonary HTN
(lung Ca)
Pathogen in Farmer’s Lung
Saccharopolyspora rectivirgula
mouldy hay/grain/silage
Antigen in Pigeon Fancier’s Lung
Proteins in excreta/feathers
Pathogen in Humidifier’s lung
Thermactinomyces spp.
Heated water reservoirs
Pathogen in Malt-workers lung
Aspergillus clavatus/fumigatus
germinating barley
Pathogen in Cheese washer’s lung
Aspergillus clavatus/Penicillium casei
Mouldy cheese
Masson bodies
polyploid plugs of loose connective tissue within alveoli and bronchioles.
Associated with Cryptogenic organising pneumonia.
Can develop into non-caseating granulomas.
Pneumoconiosis definition
A non-neoplastic lung reaction to inhalation of inorganic mineral dusts.
Cryptogenic Fibrosing Alveolitis aka?
Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis
Honeycomb lung
Progressive patchy interstitial fibrosis with cyst formation due to type II pneumocyte hyperplasia.
Usual Interstitial Pneumonia histological pattern: Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, EAA, CTD, asbestosis.
Granulomatous lung diseases
TB
Sarcoidosis
Fungi - histoplasma, cryptococcus, coccidioides, aspergillus, mucor
Occupational lung disease
Foreign body - aspiration, IVDU
4 stages of lobar pneumonia
1) Consolidation + congestion - intra-pulmonary fluid
2) Red hepatisation - neutrophilia
3) Grey hepatisation - fibrosis
4) Resolution
Atypical pneumonia pathogens
Coxiella, Mycoplasma, Chlamydia
Viruses: CMV, influenza
Percentage of PEs due to DVTs
95%
Sequelae of large emboli
acute cor pulmonale
cardiogenic shock
death
Pulmonary HTN arterial pressure?
mean pulmonary arterial pressure >25mmHg at rest.
Causes of pulmonary HTN
Pre-capillary
- chronic hypoxia -> vasoconstriction
- embolic
Capillary
- pulmonary fibrosis
Post-capillary
- vena-occlusive disease
- Left heart disease
Pathological mechanism for ARDS
Diffuse alveolar damage (epithelial +/ endothelial)
- > Exudative phase (neutrophilia)
- > hyaline membranes
- > organizing phase (-> diffuse alveolar damage)
Factors in smoke that contribute to cancer
Tumour initiator
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
Tumour promoters
- N nitrosamines, nicotine, phenols
Complete carcinogens
- Nickel, arsenic
Keratinisation and intercellular prickles are associated with which type of lung cancer
Squamous cell
Causes of lung Ca in non-smokers
Asbestos
Radiation
Heavy metals
Genetics
(passive smoking)
Pre-invasive states of adenocarcinoma
Atypical adenomatous hyperplasia
- pre-cancerous
Bronchioalveolar carcinoma
- non-invasive
Malignant epithelial lung tumour with glandular differentiation and mucin production.
Adenocarcinoma
Lung cancer associated with women and non-smokers
adenocarcinoma
4 sites of lung mets
1) Brain -> fits
2) Skin -> lumps
3) Liver -> pain and deranged LFTs
4) Bone -> pain and fracture
Paraneoplastic syndrome associated with which type of lung Cancer: Cushings
Small cell carcinoma -> ACTH
Paraneoplastic syndrome associated with which type of lung Cancer: hypercalcemia
Squamous cell carcinoma -> PTH + PTHrP
Paraneoplastic syndrome associated with which type of lung Cancer: SIADH
Small cell -> ADH
Paraneoplastic syndrome associated with which type of lung Cancer: serotonin
Carcinoid
Latency period of mesothelioma
25-45 years
In what way does a K-ras mutation predict responsiveness to erlotinib.
It predicts poor response.
Erlotinib is an anti-EGFR TKi.
K-ras mutations occur in 15-30% of lung Ca
Conversely can get responder mutations, with EGFR amplification.
Lung cancer molecular therapeutics: ERCC1 positive
Predicts poor response to cisplatin chemotherapy
Lung cancer molecular therapeutics:: EML4-ALK1
Gain-of-function kinase. Predicts that TKi of no benefit.
Fitz Hugh Curtis syndrome
Ascending inflammation from PID to liver resulting in peri-hepatitis. Diaphragmatic irritation leads to RUQ pain that is worsened by breathing, coughing, laughing.
Violin string peri-hepatic adhesions.
2 main organisms associated with PID
Chlamydia & Neisseria
Cervical excitation it most commonly associated with….
PID
Endometriosis definition
Presence of endometrial glands or storm in abnormal locations outside the uterus.
Chocolate cysts in the ovaries
Endometriosis
endometriomas
Red-blue to brown ‘powder burn’ nodules
Endometriosis
Adenomyosis definition
Ectopic endometrial tissue within the myometrium
Proportion of those with post-menopausal bleeding who have malignancy
10%
Types of endometrial carcinoma
Endometrioid (80%)
- related to oestrogen excess, obesity
- atypical endometrial hyperplasia precursor
Non-endometrioid (20%)
- papillary, serous and clear cell tumours.
- Particular genetic mutations (P53, PI3KCA, PTEN)
- elderly women with endometrial atrophy
Papillary hidradenoma
Benign vulval carcinoma
Ectopic breast tissue found on labia.
Main type of vulval carcinoma
Squamous cell carcinoma (85%)
Paget’s disease of the vulva
Adenocarcinoma-in-situ
3 main categories of primary ovarian carcinoma
Epithelial (70%)
Germ cell (20%)
Sex cord/stroma (10%)
What proportion of malignant ovarian tumours does epithelial type account for?
95%
4 subtypes of epithelial ovarian carcinoma
Serous
Mucinous
Endometrioid
Clear cell
Psammoma bodies is associated with which ovarian carcinoma
Serous carcinoma
Most common subtype of epithelial carcinoma. Mimics columnar epithelium of the tubule, usually cystic.
What type of ovarian carcinoma is associated with pseudomyxoma peritonei?
Mucinous (epithelial) carcinoma.
Mucinous adenocarcinoma that has metastasised from intestines (probably appendiceal primary)
Which type of epithelial ovarian Ca forms tubular glands?
Endometrioid. It mimics the endometrium.
10-20% associated with endometriosis; often co-exists with endometrial Ca
Which ovarian Ca is associated with a histological hobnail appearance with abundant clear cytoplasm?
Clear cell (epithelial) Ca.
Clear cytoplasm is intracellular glycogen.
Strong association with endometriosis.
3 Subtypes of Germ cell ovarian carcinoma
Dysgerminoma
Teratoma
Choriocarcinoma
Which germ cell ovarian Ca is the female equivalent of the testicular seminoma
Dysgerminoma
Compare mature and immature teratomas
Mature teratoma: Benign dermoid cysts; differentiation of germ cells into mature tissues (skin, hair, teeth, bone, cartilage)
Immature teratoma: Malignant, solid masses containing immature, embryonal tissues. Grows rapidly, invades and metastatises, results in adhesions.
Which germ cell ovarian Ca produces hCG
choriocarcinoma
3 types of sex cord/stromal ovarian Ca
Fibroma
Granulose-Theca cell tumour ( differentiation of sex cord to female structure)
Sertoli-Leydig cell tumour (differentiation of sex cord to male structure)
Meig syndrome
Triad - benign ovarian tumour (fibroma) + ascites + pleural effusion
Occurs in 50% of fibromas
What hormone do fibromas produce?
None
Benign tumour derived from cells of ovarian stroma.
What hormone does a Granulosa-Theca cell tumour produce?
E2
Oestrogen effects - irregular menstruation, breast enlargement, endometrial/breast Ca
What hormones does a Sertoli-Leydig cell tumour produce?
Androgens
Defeminisation - breast atrophy
Virilisation - hirsutism, deep voice, enlarged clitoris.
3 types of familial ovarian Ca
1) Familial Breast-Ovarian Ca syndrome
- BRCA1
2) Site specific ovarian Ca
3) Lynch type II - associated with HNPCC
Krukenberg tumour
Malignant tumour in the ovary that has metastasised from the GI tract. Most commonly gastric adenocarcinoma. 80% both ovaries.
Mucin-producing signet rings.
Compare type I and type II ovarian Ca
Type I
- low grade
- indolent
- large mass from precursor
- Kras, BRAF mutations
Type II
- high grade
- aggressive
- mainly serous tumours
- > 75% p53 mutations
How does HPV result in dysplasia and neoplasia?
Viral proteins affect cell cycle regulation.
E6 binds to p53
E7 binds to RB
CIN gradings
CIN 1 = lower 1/3 of epithelium has dysplasia
CIN 2 = lower 2/3
CIN 3 = full thickness, but basement membrane intact.
60-90% CIN 1 revers to normal over 10-23m
10% CIN 3 progresses to cervical Ca in 10y
What proportion of cervical carcinomas are adenocarcinomas?
~20%
70-80% SCC
Monitoring and diagnosing autoimmune disease and HIV.
- How to monitor the activity of SLE?
Options: C3 & C4 levels, HIV test, White cell count and differential, anti-SCL-70, anti-Sm.
C3 + C4 levels
Monitoring and diagnosing autoimmune disease and HIV.
- How to monitor a patient with HIV?
Options: C3 & C4 levels, HIV test, White cell count and differential, anti-SCL-70, anti-Sm.
WCC and differential
Monitoring and diagnosing autoimmune disease and HIV.
- Antibody useful to diagnose someone with systemic sclerosis?
Options: C3 & C4 levels, HIV test, White cell count and differential, anti-SCL-70, anti-Sm.
SCL-70
How would you treat a patient with rheumatoid arthritis who is not responsive to methotrexate and another DMARD?
Options: cyclophosphamide, tocilizumab, ustekinemab, denosumab, IFN-gamma, IFN-alpha, tacrolimus,
Tocilizumab (anti-IL-6R mAb)
This is the best answer as there is no anti-TNF medications amongst the options
How to treat a patient with Wegener’s Granulomatosis who has severe flare of disease?
Options: cyclophosphamide, tocilizumab, ustekinemab, denosumab, IFN-gamma, IFN-alpha, tacrolimus,
Cyclophosphamide
- DNA alkylating agent
A patient with osteoporosis who cannot tolerate a bisphosphonate or something.
Options: cyclophosphamide, tocilizumab, ustekinemab, denosumab, IFN-gamma, IFN-alpha, tacrolimus,
Denosumab
mAB vs. RANKL. Less osteoclast activation.
How to treat chronic granulomatous disease?
Options: cyclophosphamide, tocilizumab, ustekinemab, denosumab, IFN-gamma, IFN-alpha, tacrolimus,
IFN-gamma
A biologic that can be used to treat psoriasis
Options: cyclophosphamide, tocilizumab, ustekinemab, denosumab, IFN-gamma, IFN-alpha, tacrolimus,
Ustekinemab
mAb vs. IL-12 + IL-23. Reduced inflammatory response.
HIV: Neutralising antibodies are formed against this.
options: gp120, p24, CCR5, CCR7, protease.
gp120
HIV: Non-neutralising antibodies are formed against this.
options: gp120, p24, CCR5, CCR7, protease.
p24
HIV: A co-receptor required for entry.
options: gp120, p24, CCR5, CCR7, protease.
CCR5
Co-receptor with CXCR4
HIV: An enzyme that can be the target of HIV medication.
options: gp120, p24, CCR5, CCR7, protease.
Protease
HHV1 =
Herpes Simplex Virus 1
Associated predominantly with oral herpes
HHV2 =
Herpes Simplex Virus 2
Associated predominantly with genital herpes
HHV3 =
Varicella Zoster Virus
Chickenpox or Shingles
HHV4 =
EBV
Infectious mononucleosis, Burkitt’s lymphoma,
hairy leukoplakia
HHV5 =
CMV
Glandular-fever like illness, retinitis
HHV6 + 7=
Roseolovirus
Sixth disease (roseola infantum)
HHV8 =
KSHV
Kaposi’s sarcoma
Pathogen associated with acute mastitis
Staphylococcus
Most often during lactation or breastfeeding.
Treatment with antibiotics +/- surgical drainage
Aim for continued expression of milk
Painful, red breast with fever
acute mastitis
Inflammatory breast condition associated with keratinising squamous epithelium.
Occurs mostly in smokers, and not associated with lactation.
Periductal mastitis.
Keratinising epithelium extends deep into nipple duct orifices.
Granulomatous inflammation and dilation of large breast ducts associated with thick, proteinaceous white nipple secretions.
Mammary duct ectasia.
Benign condition occurring mainly in multiparous women 40-60y. Poorly defined palpable periareolar mass.
Also associated with breast pain, breast mass and nipple retraction.
Can mimic cancer on mammogram
Which benign breast neoplasm is particularly associated with bloody discharge?
Duct papilloma.
Which breast neoplasm is associated with a sclerosing lesion consisting of central scarring surrounded by proliferating glandular tissue in a stellate pattern?
Radial scar.
Can resemble neoplasm on mammogram
Presence of a BRCA mutation gives what lifetime risk of invasive breast Ca?
85%
Lifetime risk of Breast cancer
1 in 8
Breast screening programme Age range: Frequency: % abnormal for further assessment: Lives saved/year:
Age range: 47-73
Frequency: 3y
% abnormal for further assessment: 5
Lives saved/year: 1250
Looks for abnormal areas of calcification or mass within a breast. Particularly looking for DCIS or early invasive breast Ca
Which breast neoplasm lacks E-cadherin expression?
LCIS
ALWAYS incidental on biopsy.
RF for subsequent invasive breast Ca
What proportion of DCIS appears as micro calcification on mammogram and what proportion has clinical symptoms?
85% microcalcification
10% symptomatic - lump, discharge, Paget’s ezcematous change of the nipple.
Grading of cytology and biopsy
C/B1 = inadequate C/B2 = benign C/B3 = equivocal, probably benign C/B4 = equivocal, probably malignant C/B5 = malignant
(B5a - DCIS, B5b - invasive)
Histological grading
Score out of 3 for
1) nuclear pleomorphism
2) tubule formation
3) mitotic activity
Grade 1 = well differentiated = 3-5
Grade 2 = moderate - 6-7
Grade 3 = poorly - 8-9
Low grade ER/PR positive tumours have a good prognosis because they respond to which treatment?
Tamoxifen
oestrogen antagonist.
Which breast cancer is associated with atypical sheets of cells with lymphocytic infiltrate and central necrosis?
Basal-like carcinoma
Has a propensity for vascular invasions and distant mets.
A breast cancer is triple negative but stains positive for CK 5,6 and 14.
Basal-like carcinoma.
Triple negative : ER/PR/HER2 -ve
CK 5/6/14 = basal cytokeratins.
A group of fibroepithelial breast neoplasms that arise from interlobular stroma (can be from existing fibroadenomas) that are mostly benign but can be very aggressive.
Phyllodes tumour
Treat with WLE/mastectomy to limit local recurrence. Mets are rare.
What is the most important prognostic factor in breast cancer?
Axillary node status
Hence importance of axillary node biopsy
Name the tissue in which each type of macrophage is found:
Kupffer cell Mesangial cell Osteoclast Sinusoidal lining cell Alveolar macrophage Microglia Histiocyte Langerhans cell Macrophage like synoviocytes
Liver Kupffer cell Kidney Mesangial cell Bone Osteoclast Spleen Sinusoidal lining cell Lung Alveolar macrophage Neural tissue Microglia Connective tissue Histiocyte Skin Langerhans cell Joints Macrophage like synoviocytes
Enzyme that converts O2 into ROS such as superoxide and hydrogen peroxide
NADPH oxidase