Title: Principles of Cancer Care
1Principles of Cancer Care
- Introduction
- Overall cancer incidence rising
- breast, colon, lung, prostate,lymphoma
- Some cancers have reduced incidence
- cervix, stomach, endometrial
- Second highest cause of mortality
2Principles of Cancer Care
- Terminology
- Neoplasia - new growth
- malignant - uncontrolled growth and dissemination
- Hyperplasia - increased cell number
- Metaplasia - mature cell type replacement
- Dysplasia - altered epithelial cell size, shape
and orientation. CIS most severe form
3Principles of Cancer Care
- Causes of Neoplasia
- Immunodefficiency - transplant tumours, Kaposi
- Familial - Breast cancer, MEN, Lynch, FAP,
- Physical carcinogenesis
- foreign body - asbestos
- ionizing radiation
- Chemical carcinogenesis
- Viruses
4Biology of Cancer
- Clonality
- Most tumours arise from a single altered cell
- Most transformed cells die or are destroyed
- Surviving cell
- heritability
- escape from normal control
5Biology of Cancer
- Tumour volume doubling
- Single cell - 30 doublings ? 1 cm3
- Lethal at 40 doublings - 1 kg
- Tumour growth is initially fast - followed by
growth deceleration - Clinically doubling in tumour size over 2-3 months
6Tumour With Hypoxic Cells
7Biology of Metastasis
- Tumour acquires blood supply even before they are
palpable Þ early metastatic potential - Cure of cancer must include
- attempt to eradicate primary completely
- attempt to eradicate metastasis
8Biology of Metastasis
- Active or passive dissemination of neoplastic
disease from primary to distant site - change enables cells to enter circulation
- adherence to endothelial walls
- extravasation
- invasion of stroma
9Biology of Metastasis
- Haematogenous spread
- most tumour cell in bloodstream are rapidly
destroyed - lt 0.1 of cells survive to invade
- surviving cells are selected resistant
subpopulation of primary tumour - Subpopulation characteristics for metastasis
- destruction of basement membrane to enter vessel
- survival of blood turbulence
- appropriate ligand for cell adhesion molecule
- motility ability
- degradative enzymes - collengenase type IV
10Biology of Metastasis
- Subpopulation characteristics for metastasis
- successful tumours can grow to 1-2 mm
- further growth requires acquisition of blood
supply - angiogenesis is active process requiring tumour
angiogenic factors
Highly vascular tumours have increased potential
for metastasis - more likely that suitable cell
will eventually enter blood stream
11Biology of Metastasis
- Lymphatic spread
- Host invasion causes lymphatic vessel penetration
- Tumour emboli may get trapped in first node or
bypass to more distant node - skip lesion - Lymph nodes react to tumour and enlarge
- Are nodes a barrier/filter ?
- Lymphatic /vascular anastomosis exist
- nodal enlargement is a marker for dissemination
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13Blood Supply of the Colon
14Biology of Cancer
- Mortality from cancer
- Local tumour effect
- Metastatic disease
- Systemic effects
- malnutrition
- depression of immunocompetence
- cytolkine/other compound release
- Understanding each tumour natural history is
essential for therapy planning - e.g. difference in breast Ca and head/neck Ca
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16Biology of Cancer
- Mortality from cancer
- Local tumour effect
- Metastatic disease
- Systemic effects
- malnutrition
- depression of immunocompetence
- cytolkine/other compound release
- Understanding each tumour natural history is
essential for therapy planning - e.g. difference in breast Ca and head/neck Ca
17Importance of Early Detection of Tumours
- Too early for mutation to cells that can spread
- eradicated before metastasis - Treatment may reduce tumour bulk enough for
immune system to manage - Too early to acquire resistance to chemotherapy
18Screening for Tumours
- High incidence population
- Population at risk
- Hep B carriers - HCC
- APC gene and FAP
- racial - Japanese and stomach cancer
- Familial breast cancer
- Sensitive, cheap non invasive tests
- pap smear, faecal occult blood, mammogram
- Early stage of tumour - treatment makes a
difference
19Screening for Tumours
- Lead Time Bias
- diagnosis made earlier, prognosis not made better
- Length Bias
- slow growing tumours, longer preclinical stage
- Self Selection Bias
- persons who present themselves for screening cf.
The general population
20Surgical Principles
- Diagnosis
- Staging
- Fitness for surgery / treatment
- Surgery and or other treatment
21Surgical Principles
- Methods of Diagnosis
- Fine needle aspiration
- Histology
- incision
- excision
- luminal
- percutaneous wide bore needle - guided by
imaging - Tumour markers
22Window for FNA
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25Laparoscopic Biopsy
26Lap Biopsy of Liver Lesion
27Surgical Principles
- Staging - UICC normenclature
- T -tumour
- N- nodal status
- M - metastasis
- The T,N,M is transcribed to a stage group I,
II, III, IV
28Pericolic perirectal tissue
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30Surgical Principles
- Stage Groups
- I - early treatable
- II - early treatable (nodes ve)
- III - locally advanced
- IV - Metastatic
Stage I II early - curative approach Stage
III locally advanced - potential for cure Stage
IV systemic - palliation
31Surgical Principles
- Staging
- Clinical
- Imaging
- Intraoperative
- Pathological - pTMN
32Surgical Principles
- Fitness for surgery/treatment
- CVS, Renal, endocrine, Resp., haematopoetic
- Additional test if warranted e.g. 2D ECHO
- Specific situations -
- Liver - Childs grade
- Thorax - spirometry, blood gases
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36Major Treatment Modalities
- Surgery
- Ionising radiation - RT - Radiotherapy
- Chemotherapy
- Hormonal Therapy
- Immunotherapy
37Principles of Surgical Oncology
- Radical surgery alone replaced by multimodality
approach - Appreciation of early metastatic potential
- Risk of tumour margins
- Lymph node involvement
- Marker of metastatic disease - phenotype capable
of producing metastasis is present - Survival in node positive is disease is half
node negative disease - Malignancies dont always spread stepwise
- primary ? lymph nodes ? distant sites
38Principles of Surgical Oncology
- Survival has improved with
- less radical surgery
- early detection
- treatment modalities for metastasis
39Surgical Principles
- Surgeon must understand
- natural history
- pattern of mets
- failure patterns
- Decision
- aim of treatment - cure or palliation
- need for other modalities
- timing of different modalities
40Surgical Principles
- Surgery may be for
- primary disease eradication - radical operation
- secondary eradication or debulking
- palliation such as bypass, palliative resection
- Radical operation
- removal of tumour completely
- removal of wide margin of normal tissue
- removal of primary draining lymphatics
- obey oncological principles
41Radical Wipple operation
42Operative specimen - Wipple Operation
43Gastrojejunostomy for Palliation
44Radiotherapy
- Ionizing radiation - photons and electrons
- higher energy deeper penetration
- destroys important molecules e.g. DNA,
- reaction with water produces free radicals
damage of DNA and other molecules - unit of energy is the gray Gy 100 rad
- delivered by brachytherapy or teletherapy
- In general for local control of neoplasm
45Ionizing radiation
- Multiplying tumour cells are sensitive
- G0 tumour cells protected
- Cells at centre of solid tumour
- Ischemic cells
- Hypoxic cells
- Multiplying normal tissue at risk
- skin, GI mucosa, bone marrow, germ cells
- Quiescent normal tissue not sensitive
- Bone, liver
46Tumour With Hypoxic Cells
47RT- Increasing dose kills more tumour cells as
well as normal tissue
48RT - Tumour destruction vs organ complications
- probability curves
49Radiotherapy
- Fractionation
- Total dose given in series of small doses
- Reduces damage to normal tissue
- Maximises tumour killing
50Radiotherapy
- Fractionation how does it work ?
- Each doses kills sensitive cells but spares G0
cells - Reoxygenation of remnant G0 cells makes them
divide and be susceptible tumour - each fraction
kills more cells - Normal tissue is spared due to repair after each
small sublethal dose minimise complications
51Radiotherapy With Surgery
- Surgery removes tumour but margins are at risk
for seeding - Wider surgery increases complications
- RT excellent for margins (oxygen rich) poor for
center of tumour (oxygen poor) - Combination of surgery followed by RT increases
probability of free margins and reduces local
recurrence
52Principles of Chemotherapy
- Tumour mass growth slows as tumour enlarges -
cells at center die or remain dormant (G0)
because of blood supply limitation - Only dividing cells (growth fraction) are killed
- Growth fraction is maximum at 37 of max size
- Each dose of chemotherapy kills a fraction of
total cells
53Principles of Chemotherapy
- Concept of log kill
- Suppose a patient has 10 mets of 1 cm3 each (109
cells) total of 1010 cells. - One cycle of drugs produces 1-log kill or 90
eradication - 6 drug cycles will give 6-log kill or 99.9999
eradication - Each met will then have 103 cells left -
clinically undetectable(complete remission)
but recurrence is likely
54Principles of Chemotherapy
- Concept of log kill
- If we start with smaller volume after 6 drug
cycles we may have 102 cells per met - Immune system may be able to mop up - actual
cure
55Principles of Chemotherapy
- Chemotherapy for solid tumours is most effective
for small (early) tumours - Not suitable for solid primaries
- Ideal for early metastasis
In general ChemoRx is for systemic control after
primary treatment
56Types of Chemotherapy
- Curative - for tumours with 100 growth fraction
- blood malignancies - Adjuvant - treatment of micrometastasis after
curative treatment of primary by other modality
usually surgery - Neoadjuvant - given before definitive surgery
- Palliative - control of disseminated disease
57Administering Chemotherapy
- Select effective drug - consider toxicity
- Calculate dose needed - consider patient
performance, co morbid conditions - Suitable intervals to allow normal tissue to
recover - esp. bone marrow - Support patient and treat toxicity
- Compassion Quality of Life
58Administering Chemotherapy
- Plant Alkaloids
- Antibiotics
- Alkylating Agents
- Antimetabolites
- Combination Chemotherapy
- prevents emergence of early resistance
- additively increase in cytotoxic potency
59Cancer Therapy