surgical approaches to cancer Flashcards

1
Q

What are the general principles of biopsy?

A
  • Position biopsy site within probable surgical or radiotherapy field
  • Incision should be as small as possible
  • Handle specimens carefully
  • Obtain samples from different areas of the lesion including junction of abnormal-normal tissue
  • Avoid local dissemination of neoplastic tissue
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2
Q

When might you perform an incisional biopsy?

A
  • When mass will not work well for an FNAB and can’t perform a core biopsy either
  • Very solid tumours that won’t allow effective core biopsy to be taken
  • When cytology/ ore biopsy results non diagnostic
  • Lack of core biopsy equipment
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3
Q

What is more desirable an excisional or incisional biopsy?

A

-Incisional- you ideally want to have a diagnosis BEFORE surgery. Excisional- risk of not taking enough margins.

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4
Q

What is the problem with debulking/ intralesional/ cytoreductive excision?

A

-It leads macroscopic volume of tumour, meaning it will recur unless given adjuvent therapy. It is less effective if gross vs microscopic tumour remains)

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5
Q

Why would you chose to do a debulking/ intralesional/ cytoreductive excision?

A
  • Worries about not having enough tissue to close wound
  • Vital structures must be avoided and this can’t be done with full excision
  • Tumour was assessed without histologic diagnosis and grading
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6
Q

What is marginal excision?

A

Excision occurs immediately outside pseudocapsule.

  • Microscopic volume of tumour remain
  • Local recurrance without adjuvent therapy.
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7
Q

What is the pseudocapsule made up of?

A

Compressed tumour cells NOT connective tissue

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8
Q

What is wide excision?

A

Removal of the tumour with COMPLETE margins or normal tissue, local recurrence is unlikely

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9
Q

What are the most effective tissue barriers to cancer cell spread?

A
  • collagen rich, avascular tissues, e.g. fascia, ligaments, tendons, cartilage
    (fat, subcut tissue, muscle are all poor at resisting invading cancer cells)
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10
Q

What is radical (or compartmental) excision?

A

Removal of entire anatomical structure or compartment containing the tumour. E.g. limb amputation
- Often applies for sarcoas

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11
Q

What things do you need to think about pre-surgery?

A
  • What is the diagnosis/ staging?
  • How am I going to excise the mass?
  • How am I going to close/ reconstruct the wound?
  • Is any additional treatment needed?
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