Therapeutic Options in Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

<p>What do therapeutic options for cancer involve?</p>

A

<p>Both prevention and treatment</p>

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2
Q

<p>What are prevention options for cancer?</p>

A

<p>Environment/behaviour changes</p>

<p>Diet</p>

<p>Screening</p>

<p>Genetics</p>

<p>Medication/vaccination</p>

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3
Q

<p>What are treatment options for cancer?</p>

A

<p>Surgery</p>

<p>Radiotherapy</p>

<p>Systematic therapy</p>

<p>Immunotherapy</p>

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4
Q

<p>What is immunotherapy?</p>

A

<p>Type of cancer treatment that boosts the body's natural defences to fight cancer</p>

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5
Q

<p>What does evidence suggest colorectal cancer is increased with the consumption off?</p>

A

<p>Red meat</p>

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6
Q

<p>What does evidence suggest breast cancer is increased with the consumption of?</p>

A

<p>Saturated fat</p>

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7
Q

<p>What is the current advice for diet?</p>

A

<p>Eat 5 or more portions of fruit and vegetables per day</p>

<p>Avoid obesity</p>

<p>Regular exercise (30 mins a day)</p>

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8
Q

<p>What are the 2 classes of screening, in terms of societies optionions?</p>

A

<p>High quality research evidence</p>

<p>More controversial</p>

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9
Q

<p>What are examples of high quality research evidence screening?</p>

A

<p>Cervical cancer (smear test)</p>

<p>Colorectal cancer (blood in faeces)</p>

<p>Breast cancer (mammography)</p>

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10
Q

<p>What are examples of controversial screening?</p>

A

<p>Prostate cancer (PSA blood test)</p>

<p>Lung cancer (MR/CT screening)</p>

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11
Q

<p>What are examples of hereditary genes that increase cancer risk?</p>

A

<p>FAP increase colorectal cancer</p>

<p>BRCA1 and BRCA2 increasing breast cancer</p>

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12
Q

<p>What is a very controversial form of prevention?</p>

A

<p>Chemo-prevention</p>

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13
Q

<p>What is chemoprevention useful for?</p>

A

<p>Primary such as oesphagael cancer and breast cancer</p>

<p>Secondary such as head and neck or lung cancer</p>

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14
Q

<p>What is a common kind of chemo-prevention that is not believed to be of much use?</p>

A

<p>Anti-oxidants</p>

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15
Q

<p>What kind of cancer is heavily linked with lung cancer, meaning if you have one you are likely to have the other?</p>

A

<p>Head and neck cancer</p>

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16
Q

<p>What are the 2 general kinds of treatment?</p>

A

<p>Local or regional</p>

<p>Systematic</p>

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17
Q

<p>What are examples of local or regional treatments?</p>

A

<p>Surgery</p>

<p>Radiotherapy</p>

<p>Ablation (radiowaves or freezing)</p>

<p>Isolated limb perfusion (chemotherapy directly to the limb)</p>

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18
Q

<p>What is ablation?</p>

A

<p>Radio waves or freezing</p>

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19
Q

<p>What is isolated limb perfusion?</p>

A

<p>Chemotherapy directly to the limb</p>

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20
Q

<p>What are kinds of systematic treatments?</p>

A

<p>Hormonal therapy</p>

<p>Chemotherapy</p>

<p>Immunotherapy</p>

<p>Whole body irradiation</p>

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21
Q

<p>What can staging tell us?</p>

A

<p>Where is the cancer</p>

<p>What kind of cancer</p>

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22
Q

<p>What is used to tell us where a cancer is?</p>

A

<p>Examination</p>

<p>Imaging</p>

23
Q

<p>What is used to tell us the kind of cancer?</p>

A

<p>Pathology</p>

24
Q

<p>What does surgery need?</p>

A

<p>Anatomical clearance (complete removal of the tumour)</p>

25

What is anatomical clearance?

Complete removal of the tumour

26

What can radiotherapy do?

Treat inoperable lesions

Make surgery more possible

Maintain function or appearance

27

What does radiotherapy need, just like surgery?

Complete anatomical coverage

28

What are the 5 R's of radiobiology?

Radio sensitivity (some tumours are not sensitive to treatment)

Repair (no breaks does not allow the tumour to grow so improves survival)

Re-population

Re-oxygenation (oxygen makes cells more sensitive to treatment)

Re-assortment (tumours are least sensitive during the DNA replication stage of the cell cycle

29

When are tumours least sensitive to radiotherapy?

During the DNA replication stage of the cell cycle

30

Why is re-oxygenation important for radiotherapy?

Oxygen makes cells more sensitive to treatment

31

What is pallation?

Care that makes you feel better even though it can't sure you, used for terminally ill patients

32

What is radiotherapy used for in pallation?

Pain

Bleeding

Swollen limbs

33

What is systematic treatment used for?

Widespread disease

34

What is a possible side effect of systematic treatment?

Widespread toxicity, the dose required to get the desired effect (kill the tumour) has unavoidable side effects due to being high

35

What does hormone treatment have the potential to be?

Very specific

36

What does cytotoxic mean?

Toxic to living cells

37

What are cytotoxic drugs used for?

Curative

Pallative

Adjuvant (has surgery but at risk of reoccurence)

Neoadjuvant (treatment before surgery to shrink the tumour)

38

What is adjuvant in terms of the use of cytotoxic drugs?

Has surgery but is at risk or reoccurance

39

What is neoadjuvant in terms of the use of cytotoxic drugs?

Treatment before surgery to shrink the tumour

40

What are specific therapies based on?

Molecular science

41

What do specific therapies target?

Intracellular growth control points

42

What is an example of a specific therapy we can create?

Artificial antibodies that cannot exist in nature, such as ones that are bifunctional and can bring cells together

43

What are examples of immune therapies?

Nonspecific/innate

Specific

Monoclonal antibodies

Programmed cell death pathway (PD-1)

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) cells

44

What do programmed cell death pathways (PD-1) use?

Immune cells to attack cancer cells

45

What is chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells?

Artifical T cell receptors to give a specific cell killing function directly againt cancer cells (stops cancer cells hiding from the immune system)

46

What stops cancer cells hiding from the immune system?

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells

47

What does immunotherapy need to be?

Precise as the immune cells will keep diving and will always be present, and the wrong receptor is used they will attack healthy tissue

48

What will happen if the wrong receptor is used in immunotherapy?

The immune cells could attack healthy tissue

49

How can cancer cells hide from the immune system?

Due to being self cells (antigen binds to self-cell receptor on T cell)

50

How do CAR T cells prevent cancer from binding to self-receptors and hiding from the immune system?

Bind to cancer cells antigen with the forign receptor and destroy them

51

What does CAR T cells being successful depend on?

Mutation burden of cancer

Immunogenicity of neoantigens

52

What is clinical research important for?

Determining what treatments are effective for who and making them even better

53

Why don't all people with the same condition respond to the same treatment?

Due to unique factors such as genetics and what bacteria normally live in your gut