Tumour Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

What is a tumour (neoplasm)

A

Abnormal growing mass of tissue

It has uncoordinated growth when compared to surrounding tissue

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2
Q

How will the removal of a stimulus causing the tumour affect its growth

A

It may continue to grow due to the irreversible change caused

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3
Q

What two groups of tumours are there

A

Benign

Malignant (cancer)

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4
Q

What are malignant tumours

A

Tumours that can invade into adjacent tissue and metastasise (spread) and grow at other sites with the body

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5
Q

State two factors which can cause cancer

A

Genetics

Environmental factors

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6
Q

What are the 5 most common types of cancer

A
Breast
Lung
Prostate
Colon
Melanoma
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7
Q

Why is tumour classification important

A

So we can understand tumour behaviour
So we can determine the probable outcome (prognosis)
For treatment

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8
Q

What is tumour classification based on

A

Tissue of origin

Whether the tumour is benign or malignant

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9
Q

Which type of tissues can tumours originate from

A
Epithelium
Connective tissue (mesenchyme)
Blood
Lymphoid tissue
Melanocytes
Neural tissue
Germ cells (ovary/testis)
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10
Q

What are the two main types of epithelial tumours

A

Glandular

Squamous

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11
Q

What are benign and malignant glandular epithelial tumours known as

A

Benign - Adenoma

Malignant - Adenocarcinoma

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12
Q

What are benign and malignant squamous epithelial tumours known as

A

Benign - Squamous papilloma

Malignant - Squamous carcinoma

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13
Q

In epithelial tumour nomenclature what do the benign and malignant tumours normally end in

A

Benign - oma

Malignant - carcinoma

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14
Q

What type of connective tissue tumours can occur

A

Bone
Fat
Fibrous tissue

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15
Q

What is a benign and malignant bone tumour known as

A

Benign - Osteoma

Malignant - Osteo-sarcoma

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16
Q

What is a benign and malignant fat tumour known as

A

Benign - Lipoma

Malignant - Lipo-sarcoma

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17
Q

What is a benign and malignant fibrous tissue tumour known as

A

Benign - Fibroma

Malignant - Fibro-sarcoma

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18
Q

In connective tissue tumour nomenclature what do malignant tumours normally end in

A

Sarcoma

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19
Q

What is a malignant WBC tumour known as

A

Leukaemia

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20
Q

What is a malignant lymphoid tissue tumour known as

A

Lymphoma

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21
Q

What is a benign melanocyte tumour known as

A

Naevus

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22
Q

What is a malignant melanocyte tumour known as

A

Melanoma

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23
Q

What is a tumour in the central nervous system known as

A

Astrocytoma

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24
Q

What is a tumour in the peripheral nervous tissue known as

A

Schwannoma

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25
What are germ cell tumours known as
Teratomas
26
What is a teratoma composed of
Various tissues | Develops in ovaries/testies
27
Where are teratomas normally benign and where are they malignant
Benign - Ovaries | Malignant - Testies
28
What are the features of benign tumours
``` Non-invasive growth pattern Normally encapsulated No evidence of invasion No metastases Cells similar to normal Function similar to normal tissue Rarely cause death Are well-differentiated ```
29
What are the features of malignant tumours
``` Invasive growth patterns No capsule (or capsule breached by tumour cells) Abnormal cells Loss of normal function Often evidence of spread of cancer Cancers often poorly differentiated Frequently cause death ```
30
State some properties of cancer cells
``` Loss of tumour suppressor genes Gain the function of oncogenes Altered cellular function Abnormal morphology Cells capable of independent growth ```
31
Give examples of tumour suppressor genes
Adenomatous polyposis Retinoblastoma BRCA1
32
Give examples of oncogenes
``` B-raf Cyclin D1 ErbB2 Myc K-ras N-ras ```
33
What does the loss of cellular function cause
It causes the loss of cell-to-cell adhesion Altered cell-to-matrix adhesion Production of tumour related proteins (tumour biomarkers)
34
Give examples of types of tumour biomarkers
Onco-fetal proteins Oncogenes Growth factors and receptors Immune checkpoint inhibitors
35
How can tumour biomarkers be benefical in the clinical setting
For: Screening Diagnosis Prognostic (to identify patients with a specific outcome) Predictive (to identify patients who will respond to a particular therapy)
36
Give examples of some tumour biomarkers
``` Kras - Colorectal cancer Braf - Melanoma EGFR - Lung cancer PD-L1 - Lung cancer Her2 - Breast cancer, Gastric cancer ```
37
Describe the morphology of cancer cells
The show cellular and nuclear pleomorphism (variation in size and shape) Abnormal mitoses will often be present
38
What is tumour growth
A balance between cell growth and cell death
39
What is tumour angiogensis
Formation of new blood vessels by tumours which are required to sustain tumour growth
40
What is apoptosis
A mechanism of programmed single cell death in an active cell process
41
What is the role of apoptosis in tumour growth
Regulates tumour growth | Involved in the response to chemo and radiotherapy
42
What do blood vessels provide for tumours
A route for release of tumour cells into circulation The more blood vessels that are present in a tumour equal a poorer prognosis
43
What is the fundamental property of cancer
Invasion | Metastasis
44
Why is the spread of cancer a major clinical problem
It can cause the formation of metastatic (secondary) tumours A patients prognosis is dependent on the extent of the spread
45
How does the conversion from invasion to metastasis occur
Multi-step process Involves increased matrix degradation by proteolytic enzymes Altered cell-to-cell and cell-to-matrix adhesion
46
How can cancer spread
Locally Lymphatic Through blood Trans-coelomic
47
How does local cancer spread occur
Malignant tumour invades connective tissue | Then invasion of lymph/blood vessels
48
How does lymphatic cancer spread occur
``` Adherence of tumour cells to lymph vessels Invasion from lymphatics Invasion to the lymph nodes Metastasis forms in lymph nodes Clinical evidence of metastasis produced ```
49
How does blood cancer spread occur
Adherence of tumour cells to blood vessels Invasion from blood vessels to tissues Metastasis froms Clinical evidence of metastasis produced
50
What is trans-coelomic spread
Special form of local spread | Tumours spread across body cavities (e.g. pleural or peritoneal)
51
Which type of tumours show trans-coelomic spread
Lung Stomach Colon Ovary
52
What are the sites of metastasis related to
Not to tissue blood flow | Dependent on tumour and tissue releated factors (metastatic niche)
53
State some common sites of metastasis
``` Liver Lung Brain Bone (axial skeleton) Adrenal gland Omentum ```
54
State some uncommon sites of metastasis
Spleen Kidney Skeletal muscle Heart
55
Where does breast cancer commonly metastasise to
Bone
56
Where does prostate cancer commonly metastasise to
Bone
57
Where does colorectal cancer commonly metastasise to
Liver
58
Where does ovarian cancer commonly metastasise to
Omentum
59
What type of cancer can the alpha-fetoprotein be a tumour biomarker for
Testicular teratoma | Hepatocellular carcinoma
60
What type of cancer can the carcino-embryonic antigen (CEA) be a tumour biomarker for
Colorectal cancer
61
What type of cancer can the oestrogen receptor be a tumour biomarker for
Breast cancer
62
What type of cancer can the prostate specific antigen be a tumour biomarker for
Prostate cancer
63
What are the local effects of benign tumours
Pressure | Obstruction
64
What are the local effects of malignant tumours
Pressure Obstruction Tissue destruction (ulceration/infection) Bleeding (anaemia and haemorrhage) Pain (from pressure on nerves, perineural infiltration, bone pain from pathological fractures) Effects of treatment
65
What are the systemic effects of cancer
Weight loss (cancer cachexia) Secretion of hormones (normal and abnormal/inappropriate) Paraneoplastic syndromes Effects of treatment
66
When are 'normal' hormones produced by tumours
They are produced by tumours of the endocrine organ however there may be abnormal control of hormone production/secretion
67
When are 'abnormal'/inappropriate hormones produced by tumours
They are produced by a tumour from an organ which doesn’t normally produce hormones
68
Paraneoplastic syndromes...
cannot be explained by local or metastatic effects of tumours (e.g. neuropathy or myopathy)
69
Why is it better for cancer to be detected at an early stage
It reduces/prevents morbidity/mortality
70
How can cancer be detected at the pre-invasive stage
Through the identification of dysplasia/intraepithelial neoplasia
71
What is dysplasia
A pre-malignant change | The earliest change in the process of malignancy which can be visualised
72
Where can dysplasia be identified
Epithelium | Can progress to cancer
73
State the features of dysplasia
Disorganisation of cells - increase nuclear size, increases mitotic activity, abnormal mitoses Grading of dysplasia - high grade, low grade No invasion
74
What is required for the early detection of cancer
Effective test which is sensitive/specific and acceptable
75
Give an example of a screening programme which helps to detect cancer early
Cervical screening programme
76
What is the aim of the cervical screening programme
To reduce the incidence of squamous carcinoma of the cervix
77
What does the cervical screening programme aim to detect
Dysplastic cells from squamous epithelium of the cervix
78
What can cause disorders or cell growth to occur
Normal and abnormal cell cycles Chemical carcinogenesis Radiation carcinogenesis
79
What does the normal cell cycle involve
Mitosis to cause mitotic divison
80
What is mitosis
Mechanism of cellular replication which causes nuclear division plus cytokinesis
81
What does mitotic divison produce
Two genetically identical daughter cells
82
What is the cell cycle
The time interval between mitotic divisions
83
What should the cell cycle be coordinated with
The body's needs | Production of cell numbers and cell types is tightly controlled
84
What must occur for a viable progeny to be produced
The cell must progress through cycle phases (DNA synthesis and mitosis) in the correct sequence
85
What does quality control ensure
Each daughter cell receives a full chromosome complement | Mutations in DNA sequences do not pass on
86
What external factors influence the cell cycle control
Hormones Growth factors Cytokines Stroma
87
What internal factors influence the cell cycle control
Critical checkpoints - Restriction point (R)
88
What occurs prior to reaching the restriction point
Progress through G1 depends on external stimuli
89
What occurs after the restirction point
Progression becomes autonomous
90
What are the phases of the cell cycle
Quiescent, G0 Interphase (G1, S, G2) Cell division (mitosis)
91
What is the quiescent phase
The resting phase: cell has left the cycle and stopped dividing
92
What occurs in G1
Cells increase in size | G1 checkpoint control mechanism ensures everything is ready for DNA synthesis
93
What occurs in S phase
DNA replication occurs
94
What occurs in G2
Gap between DNA synthesis and mitosis Cell continues to grow G2 checkpoint control mechanism ensures that everything is ready to enter the M phase
95
What occurs in mitosis
Cell growth ceases | Metaphase checkpoint ensures cell is ready to complete division
96
Where are checkpoints present in the cell cycle
At the end of G1 End of G2 At metaphase
97
What happens if the cell size is inadequate
G1 or G2 arrest
98
What happens if the nutrient supply is inadequate
G1 arrest
99
What happens if essential external stimulus is lacking
G1 arrest
100
What happens if the DNA is not replicated
S arrest
101
What happens if DNA damage is detected
G1 or G2 arrest
102
What happens if there is chromosome misalignment
M-phase arrest
103
What are checkpoints
System of cyclically active and inactive enzymes | Catalytic sub-units activated by a regulatory sub-unit
104
What is a catalytic subunit called
Cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs)
105
What is a regulatory sub-unit called
Cyclins
106
What is the active catalytic subunits and regulatory sub-unit called
CDK/cyclin complex
107
What do acitve CDK/cyclin complexes do
Phosphorylate target proteins
108
What does the phosphorylation target proteins cause
The activation/inactivation of that substrate which regulate events in the next cycle phase
109
How are CDKs constitutively expressed
In an inactive form
110
How is CDK activity regulated
``` The cyclins accumulate and are destroyed as cycle progresses CDK inhibitors (CKIs) ```
111
What CDK inhibitors (CKIs) families are there and how do they work
INK4A CIP/KIP Bind to cyclin/CDK complexes
112
Describe the INK4A family
They bind to CDK4 and 6 to prevent association of these CDKs with their cyclin regulatory proteins
113
How is the cell cycle regulated
An extracellular growth signal activates cyclin D This combines with CDK4 to form a cyclin D-CDK4 complex The complex inhibits p21 and activates E2F The activation of E2F responsive genes occurs through phosphorylation and deactivation of RB This causes Cyclin E to combine with CDK2 to form cyclin E-CDK2 complex And cyclin A to combine with CDK2 to form cyclin A-CDK2 complex
114
What does the cyclin E-CDK2 control
G1/S checkpoint
115
What does the cyclin A-CDK2 control
G2/M checkpoint
116
Describe the retinoblastoma gene
It encodes a 110 kDa phosphoprotein (pRb) expressed in almost every cell of the human body pRb is hypophosphorylated and phosphorylation increases as cells progress through the cell cycle Active cyclin D/CDK complexes will phosphorylate pRb
117
What is the function of hypophosphorylated/active Rb
Inactivates E2F so puts a brake to the cell cycle
118
What is the function of phosphorylated/inactive pRb
Loses affinity for E2F
119
What is the main target for pRb
E2F transcription factor as E2F is a potent stimulator of cell cycle entry
120
What will free E2F transcription factors do
Activate vital target genes
121
What causes carcinogenesis
Mutation of genetic material that upsets the normal balance between proliferation and apoptosis (cell death)
122
What leads to tumours
Uncontrolled proliferation of cells
123
What types of mutations can cause a cell to lose control of proliferation
Mutations in genes regulating cell division, apoptosis and DNA repair
124
What can lead to carcinogenesis
Non-lethal genetic damage
125
Where can non-lethal genetic damage arise from
``` Environmental agents (e.g. chemicals, radiation and oncogenic viruses) Inherited ```
126
Describe chemical carcinogenesis
Purine and pyrimidine bases in DNA are critically damaged by various oxidizing and alkylating agents The chemical carcinogens or their active metabolites react with DNA forming covalently bound products (DNA adducts) Adduct formation at particular chromosome sites causes cancer
127
What is a critical cellular target for radiation damage
Purine and pyrimidine bases in DNA
128
When is radiation carcinogenic
High-energy radiation if received in sufficient doses (e.g. from ultraviolet radiation, X-rays, Gamma radiation)
129
Which type of genes are mutated in cancer
Genes that regulate the cell cycle
130
Which regulatory pathways tend to be disrupted in cancer
The cyclin D-pRb-E2F pathway | p53 pathway
131
What happens when pRB is inactive or absent
It causes the cell cycle break to be released
132
Where are cancers most likely to be dysregulated
G1-S
133
Which genes tend to have mutations that cause dysregulation at G1-S
Rb CDK4 cyclin D p16
134
What is the function of p53
To maintains genomic integrity
135
What does increased levels of p53 in damaged cells cause
Induces cell cycle arrest at G1 Facilitates DNA repair If damage is severe it causes p53-induced apoptosis
136
What occurs in cells with mutated p53
They do not G1 arrest or repair damaged DNA | Genetically damaged cells will proliferate and form malignant neoplasms
137
State some factors which affect carcinogenesis
Geographic and environmental factors Age Heredity
138
What are proto-oncogenes
Normal genes that promote normal cell growth and mitosis | Normal genes coding for normal proteins that regulate growth
139
What are tumour suppressor genes
Genes that discourage cell growth, or temporarily halt cell division to carry out DNA repair
140
What type of genes are classed as tumour-suppressor genes
Genes negatively regulating mitosis - Rb Genes regulating apoptosis Genes regulating DNA repair
141
What is the key event in tumour formation
Uncontrolled cell proliferation via cell cycle dysregulation via loss of tumour suppressor gene function
142
What types of mutations can mimic the effect of pRB loss
Mutational activation of cyclin D or CDK4 | Mutational inactivation of CDKIs also drive proliferation
143
How can mutations of anti-oncogenes occur
From: Sporadic mutations Inherited mutations
144
How do inherited anti-oncogene mutations arise
One defective inherited copy of pRb | Somatic point mutation of other copy
145
How do sporadic anti-oncogene mutations arise
2 mutations occur in a single cell
146
How many allelic copies must be mutated to give rise to cancer
Both
147
What types of syndromes can be involved in causing cancer
Heredity - accounts for 5-10% of all cancers Inherited cancer syndromes Familial cancers Autosomal recessive syndromes of defective DNA repair
148
What are inherited cancer syndromes
A strong family history of uncommon site-specific cancers | An autosomal dominant inheritance of a single mutant gene
149
Give examples of inherited cancer syndromes
``` Familial retinoblastoma Familial adenomatous polyposis of colon Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Neurofibromatosis Von Hippel-Lindau Syndrome ```
150
What is the risk with familial retinoblastoma
Carriers have 10000x risk of bilateral retinoblastoma | Increased risk of second cancers (e.g. bone sarcomas)
151
What is the risk with familial adenomatous polyposis of colon
100% risk of colon cancer by age 50 years
152
What are the signs of familial cancers
Family clustering of cancers but individual predisposition unclear Multifactorial inheritance Early age of onset Multiple/bilateral tumours
153
Give examples of familial cancers
Some Breast cancers Some Ovarian cancers Non-FAP colon cancers
154
Describe the APC gene
Function: signal transduction Somatic mutation causes: gastric, colon, pancreas, melanoma Inherited mutation causes: FAP colon cancer
155
Describe the p53 gene
Function: cell cycle/apoptosis Somatic mutation causes: most cancers Inherited mutation causes: li-fraumeni syndrome (multiple carcinomas and sarcomas)
156
Describe the Rb gene
Function: cell cycle regulation Somatic mutation causes: retinoblastoma, colon, lung and breast carcinomas Inherited mutation causes: retinoblastoma and osteosarcoma
157
Describe the p16 (INK4a) gene
Function: Inhibits CDKs Somatic mutation causes: pancreatic, oesophageal carcinomas Inherited mutation causes: maligant melanomas
158
Describe BRCA 1/2
Function: DNA repair | Inherited mutation causes: breast and ovarian cancer
159
What are oncogenes derived from
Proto-oncogenes
160
How can oncogenes be activated
By: Alteration of proto-oncogene structure Dysregulation of proto-oncogene expression
161
What does the dysregulation of proto-oncogene expression cause
Gene amplification | Overexpression
162
What does the alteration of proto-oncogene structure cause
Point mutations | Chromosome rearrangements + translocations
163
What can oncogenes produce
Active oncoprotein products
164
What type of oncoprotein products are there
``` Growth Factors Growth Factor Receptors Proteins involved in Signal Transduction Nuclear Regulatory Proteins Cell Cycle Regulators ```
165
What does the proto-oncogene sis activate
PDGF causing overexpression | Cancers caused: astrocytoma, osteosarcoma
166
What does the proto-oncogene erb-B2 activate
EGF-receptors family causing amplification | Cancers caused: breast, ovarian, lung, stomach
167
What does the proto-oncogene ras activate
GTP-binding causing point mutation | Cancers caused: lung, colon, pancreas, leukaemia
168
What does the proto-oncogene myc activate
Transcriptional activators causing translocation | Cancer caused: Burkitt's lymphoma
169
What does the proto-oncogene cyclin D activate
Cyclins causing translocation and amplification | Cancers caused: mantle cell lymphom, breast, liver, oesophageal
170
What does the proto-oncogene CDK4 activate
CDK causing amplification | Cancers caused: melanoma, sarcoma
171
What mechanisms can be used for viral carcinogenesis
Virus genome inserts near a host proto-oncogene Viral promoter or other transcription regulation elements cause proto-oncogene over-expression Retroviruses insert an oncogene into host DNA causing cell division
172
Which DNA viruses are known to cause cancer in humans
HPV (cervical cancer) Hepatitis B (liver cancer) EBV (Burkitt lymphoma)
173
How many genetic aberrations do sporadic cancers obtain
Multiple | The abnormalities accumulate with time