S11 L2 Malignancy of the Reproductive Tract Flashcards
What are most vulval cancers and what are they caused by?
Squamous cell carcinoma (rare)
- Older women: long standing chronic irritation e.g lichen sclerosus and squamous hyperplasia
- Pre-menopausal: HPV 16 causing vulval intraepithelial neoplasia (VIN) which leads to SCC. 70% of vulval cancers
How does vulval cancer spread and how is it treated?
- Locally to inguinal lymph nodes
- Definitive surgery to remove primary tumour and nodes. Higher survial in smaller lesions
What is the transformation zone of the cervix?
- Endocervix is glandular epithelium and ectocervix is squamous
- Metaplasia occurs in the glandular epithelium that forms ectropion to protect from the low pH in vagina
What type of cancers form in the cervix?
- Squamous cell carcinom in 80%
- 15% adenocarcinoma
What is the cause of cervical cancer?
- HPV causing infection in metaplastic squamous cells leading to increased proliferation. Works by producing E6 and E7 which inactivate p53 and Rb
- Also can develop from cervical intraepithelial neoplasia
What are the different stages of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia?
- Dysplasia caused by HPV that can lead to cervical carcinoma
- CIN1 means bottom third have dyplasia and so on
- Higher the CIN more risk for SCC
What are risk factors for developing CIN and what have the government put into place to try and overcome some of these risks?
- Since 2008 girls aged 12-13 have been vaccinated against 4 high risk HPV’s and it lasts for 10 years
- Vaccine protects against oral, anal, vulval and cervical cancers
What would you do if you had CIN1/2/3 on a cervical screening?
- CIN1: often regresses spontaneously, just have a follow up biopsy in a year
- CIN 2/3: Need treatment as increased risk of progression to SCC. Need large loop excision of transformation zone LLETZ
How does cervical screening work?
- Brush used to scrape cells from transformation zone
- Cells with abnormally large nuclei are positive and will look down microscope
- Aim is to detect preinvasive lesion so can excise it
- If positive will refer for colposcopy and removal of these areas by diathermy
Where does cervical carcinoma spread to?
- Iliac and aortic nodes before wide spread dissemination
- Can spread locally to ureters, bladder and rectum and this can cause pain and fistula formation
- Staged using FIGO
What may invasive cervical cancer present as and how do we treat it?
- Bleeding post coital, intermenstrual, post menopausal
- Palpable mass
- Can’t just do excision with invasive
What type of cancer forms in the endometrium and what is this cause of this?
- Adenocarcinoma (most common gynaeological cancer)
- Often in perimenopausal and older women due to unopposed oestrogen
- Endometrial hyperplasia is a precursor for endometrioid endometrial adenocarcinoma
How does endometrial cancer present and what are the two different histological types?
- Bleeding post menopausal or intermenstrual
- Mass
- Serous has worse prognosis
Where does endometrial carcinoma spread to?
- Invades myometrium and spreads to cervix, bladder and rectum, peritoneal cavity and regional lymph nodes
- Serous spreads transcoelomic as exfoliates form, travel through fallopian tubes and deposit on peritoneal surface
What type of endometrial cancer is this and why?
- Serous
- Poorly differentiated so higher grade
- Psammoma bodies (collections of calcium)
What type of mass is this that was found in the myometrium and what symptoms would this mass cause?
- Leiomyoma: benign mass of smooth muscle
- Can be asymptomatic or heavy period, menorrhagia, infertility
- Uterine enlargement so pressure symptoms like urinary frequency
- Oestrogen dependent so regress after menopause
What is this mass found in the myometrium and how does it behave?
- Leiomyosarcoma
- Similar symptoms to fibroids but does not develop from leiomyoma
- Spreads via blood stream as sarcoma, to lungs and then systemic