Surgical oncology Flashcards
gold standard of staging CAs?
pathologic staging (biopsy)
what makes pancreatic CA so nasty?
hard to operate on due to heavy blood supply/important NV structures
chemo vs radiation therapy?
chemo goes everywhere in the body whereas radiation is like a light beam (more localized treatment)
neoadjuvant vs adjuvant therapy?
- neoadjuvant is chemo given before surgery to see if it makes the tumor smaller
- adjuvant is therapy after surgical resection
General CA staging
**varies per CA TNM- tumor, nodes, metastasis Tis (in situ), T1-4, N0-N2, M0-M2 If staged B, then always worse Metastatic is always stage 4
origin of carcinoma vs sarcoma vs lymphoma/leukemia
carcinoma: epithelial
sarcoma: connective tissue
lymphoma: blood cell
how do they spread: carcinoma vs sarcoma?
carcinoma: lymph nodes
sarcoma: through blood
carcinoma, sarcoma, lymphoma types?
C: lung, breast, colon prostate
S: osteosarcoma, liposarcoma
L: hodgkin’s, childhood leukemia
carcinoma, sarcoma, lymphoma treatments?
C: surgery, chemo and radiation
S: surgery (wide local resection vs amputation) and adjuvant radiation
L: mostly chemo (some radiation and surgery)
how does pancreatic CA usually present?
painless jaundice (CA around bile duct) or incidental
types of biopsies? (4)
Punch, shave, excisional (tumor cut out), incisional (small sample taken)
which biopsy type is best for melanoma? why?
punch bc can see depth of tumor
how is MR helpful for sarcoma staging?
MR tells you about muscle layers