Title: The Big C: CANCER
1The Big C CANCER
- By Diana Blum RN MSN
- Metropolitan Community College
2Definition
- According to the American Cancer Society
- A large group of diseases characterized by
uncontrolled growth and spread of abnormal cells
32nd leading cause of death in USA
Metastasizing cancer Cell 1 out of 4 Americans
will have CA at some time in their life
4Common Sites
- MEN
- Prostate
- Lung
- Colorectal
- Bladder
- Lymphoma
- Melanoma of Skin
- Oral
- Kidney
- Leukemia
- Stomach
- Women
- Breast
- Lung
- Colorectal
- Corpus Uteri
- Ovarian
- Lymphoma
- Melanoma of Skin
- Bladder
- Cervical
- Pancreas
5Top 3 Cancers that cause Deaths
- Men
- Lung
- Prostate
- Colorectal
- Women
- Lung
- Breast
- Colorectal
6- Early Diagnosis Is Key for survival
7Normal Cell
- Single small nucleus
- Performs a specific function when it matures
- Able to recognize other cells and identify tissue
of origin - Reproduce in a controlled manner
- Remain in their tissue of origin except blood
cells
8Neoplasm (aka TUMOR)
- Cells that reproduce abnormally and in an
uncontrolled manner
9Benign Tumors
- Harmless
- Do not spread
- Can create pressure or obstruct organs
- 3 types
- Fibroma fibrous connective tissue
- Lipoma fat tissue
- Leiomyoma smooth muscle tissue
10Malignant Tumors
- Cancer cells characteristics
- Change in appearance from normal cells/origin
- Inability to properly perform function
- Not recognized by other cells
- Random disorganized uncontrolled growth pattern
- Continue to divide when theres no need
- Can migrate to other organs
11Malignant continued
- Tend to press on normal tissue and organs as the
grow - Rob normal cells of nutrients
- Invasive with all tissues
- Regional invasion movement into adjoining cells
- Metastasis to spread to distant sites
- Most common sites are liver, brain, bone, and
lungs - Treatment is more difficult with mets
124 types of Malignancies
- Carcinoma skin, glands, lining of digestive
urinary and reproductive tracts - Sarcoma bone, muscle, other connective tissues
- Melanomas pigment cells in the skin
- Leukemias and lymphomas blood forming tissues
lymphoid tissue, plasma cells, and bone marrow
13Malignant Transformation
- 4 steps
- Initiation DNA exposed to carcinogen
- Promotion sufficient exposure to agent to
encourage/enhance cell growth - Progression accelerated growth, enhanced
invasion, altered appearance and activity - Metastasis tumor develops blood vessels
- Penetrates capillaries and form fibrin network
(undetectable by immune system) - Dissolve lining of blood vessels to invade
surrounding tissue - Set up their own blood supply
14Staging
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16Stage 1
- The malignant cells are confined to the tissue of
origin. Not invasive with other tissues
17Stage 2
- Limited spread of the cancer in the local area
usually near lymph nodes
18Stage 3
- The tumor is larger or has spread from the local
site of origin into nearby tissues - regional lymph nodes are likely to be involved
19Stage 4
- The cancer has metastasized to distant parts of
the body
20THE TNM Staging System
- Specifies the status of the primary tumor,
regional lymph nodes, and distant mets - T tumor
- N regional nodes
- M distant mets
21TNM Continued
- Tprimary tumor
- T0 no signs of tumor after treatment
- Tis malignancy in epithelial tissue but not in
basement membrane - T1 minimal size and extension
- T2, T3progressive increase in size and extension
- T4large size and extension
- Nregional nodes
- N0no regional nodes involved
- N1minimal node involvement
- N2increased involvement of regional nodes
- N3extensive involvement of regional nodes
- Mdistant mets
- M0no distant mets
- M1distant mets present
22practice
- You are caring for a client who has cancer. The
cancer is staged T4,N3, M1 how would you
interpret the information???
- Primary tumor is large in size with extension
that extensively involves the lymph nodes and
distant mets are present.
23Risk Factors
- No single cause identified
- Carcinogens exposure
- (chemicals, radiation, viruses)
- Cigarettes, asbestos, nitrates
- Steroids, estrogens, tar, soot, asphalt, arsenic,
corticosteroids, alkylating agents - Heredity and hormones also play factor
- Familial cancersappear at a high rate than
expected. No single gene pinpointed - Hereditypredictable patterns of inheritance
found on a single gene
247 warning signs of Cancer
- C change in bowel or bladder
- A a sore that does not heal
- U unusual bleeding or discharge
- T Thickening or lump in a breast or elsewhere
- I Indigestion or difficulty swallowing
- O Obvious change in a wart or mole
- N Nagging cough or hoarseness
25Prevention and Detection
- Health promotion
- Avoid Carcinogens
- ID high risk people
26Health Promotion
- Low fat, low cal, no added preservative, high
fiber diet with at least 5 fruits and veggies
daily - Avoid Alcohol
- Avoid salt cured, smoked, or nitrate preserved
foods - Balance activity and rest with stress management
27Avoid carcinogens
- Avoid over exposure from the sun
- Do not smoke
- Avoid second hand smoke
- Wear a mask at work
28ID High risk people
- This helps researchers recognize factors that
contribute to cancers - See doctor at least every 6 months
29Diagnosis
- H P
- Physical Exam
- Diagnostic Tests
- Biopsy the removal of cells cut from a sample
- Smear blood cells under microscope to check for
leukemia - CT Scan used fto detect head and neck Ca, joints
and soft tissue - MRI detects CNS , spinal, neck, bones, joints,
lung, kindey, etc. - PET(positron Emission Tomography) used to detect
solid tumors in the brain and breast and to
assess cancer treatment - Lab Alpha fetoprotein , Ca50, Ca 125, PSA, etc.
(see page 327)
30Treatments
- Surgery
- Done for
- diagnosis
- Symptom relief
- maintain function
- Reconstruction
- Possible cure
31Surgery continued
- Preop/postop care varies
- The recommended treatment is based on the
cancers type, location, and mets
32Radiotherapy
- Uses ionizing radiation
- Dose 1 gray equals 100 rads
- Used to treat malignant cells
- Has delayed and immediate effects
- Delayed altered DNA which impairs the cells
ability to reproduce - Immediate cell death due to damage of cell
membrane
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34Caregiver Safety with radiation
- The less time spent near the source the less
exposure - Unless direct care being given stay 6 ft away
from the source - Effective shielding depends on type of rays (the
denser the material the more protection)
35External radiation
- PROCEDURE
- Source is outside the body
- Special xray machine provides treatment
- of treatments depends on the doctor
- Example 5 times a week for 2-8 weeks
- PATIENT PREP
- Treatment simulation to determine exact dosage
needed and schedule - The skin is marked with permanent, waterproof
ink, by the radiologist for the exact site - Instruct client not to remove markings without
permission
36Internal Radiation (Brachytherapy)
- PROCEDURE
- Sources
- Iodine, phosphorus, radium, iridium, radon,
cesium - Instruct client that they pose a threat unitl the
source is removed unless permanently implanted
small beads used - 2 TYPES
- Sealed
- Unsealed
37Sealed
- Source is sealed in a container and inserted into
the body (CESIUM) - Sources may be placed in threads, beads, needles,
seeds, or molds - To protect visitors from exposure the client
needs - To be placed in isolation
- Have a sign on the door indicating radiation
- No pregnant women or kids under 18 allowed in
room - Limit time with visitors
- Have organized schedule for cares
38Between scrotum and anus
Intracavity such As bladder
39- Staff to wear film badges to monitor exposure
- Recognize that Sealed sources can become
dislodged - Portable lead shields provides minimal protection
Immediately notify MD if source becomes
dislodged. - Do not touch source with bare hands
40Unsealed
- Body fluids may be contaminated
- Must wear gloves when working with patient
- Contaminated fluids, dressings, etc may require
additional precautions depending on the agency. - Disposable utensils are recommended
- Equipment being removed from room must be checked
for radiation level first
41Radiation side effects
- Normal cells may be harmed (hair follicles, bone
marrow, lining of gi tractand urinary tract) - Anemia-deficiency of RBC
- Low WBCs
- Take 2-6 wks to recover
- Bruising/Bleeding( low platelets)
- Takes 2-6 wks to recover
- Alopecia (hair loss)
- Anorexia
- Dry mouth
- Harms reproductive cells
42See chart 24-9 on page 331
43Nursing Implications
- Teach pt to avoid exposure to sun, trauma, harsh
chemicals, soaps - Teach pt to leave markings alone and to not use
lotion during treatment - New hair may be different texture and color
- Wig is okay to wear
- Encourage dental care
- Small frequent feedings
- Monitor I/O
- Increase fluid intake
- Encourage C DB
44Chemotherapy
- Use of chemical agents to treat (Antineoplastics)
- Destroy rapidly dividing cells
- Curative in some cases
- Decreases symptoms in others
45Antineoplastics (see table 24-10)
- Cell cycle phase specific- only works in a
certain phase - Cell cycle phase non specific-works in all stages
and phases - 5 types
- Cytotoxic agents Taxol, ifex, adriamycin, folex
- Hormones and Hormone antagonists femara, emcyt,
evista - Biologic response modifiers interferons,
interleukins - Angiogenesis inhibitors brand new and being
studied
46Chemo continued
- Administered by doctor or certified nurse
- Given inpt or outpt
- Routes po, iv, intracavity, or intrathecal
- Intra cavity installed into cavity like bladder
- Intrathecal is given in subarachnoid space
- Perfusiontechnique where drug is injected into
artery supplying the tumor
47Side Effects (see table 24-11)
- Act on normal cells as well
- Same as radiation
- Bone marrow supression- most dangerous
- N/V
- alopecia
- Client is also at risk for toxic effects
- to heart (adriamycin)-causes heart failure
- lung (Blenoxane)-pulmonary fibrosis and
inflammation - nerve tissue (Velbane, Oncovin)- numbness,
tingling, loss of deep tendon reflexes. - kidney, bladder
48Biotherapy
- Agents work by affecting biological processes
including - hematopoietic growth factors (eyrthropoietin(produ
ction of RBC), numega, colony stimulating
factors) - Biologic response modifiers (not first line
treatment still being studied), and - Monoclonal antibodies (specific for proteins on
surface of cancer cell)
49Transplants and hormone therapy
- Bone marrow- used with leukemia/lymphoma
- Stem cell- bone marrow depression
- Both are done to restore blood manufacturing
cells - Hormone therapy-used to supress natural hormone
secretion, block hormone actions, or provide
supplemental hormones
50Nursing Assessment- diagnostic phase
- Health History
- Chief complaint, past medical hx, family history,
system review (lumps, lesions, pain, fatigue,
easy bruising, ha, hemoptysis, vision
disturbance, loss of appetite, etc.(see pg 325) - Examination
- Vs, ht, wt, inspect face, scalp, mouth for
lesions - Ascultate lungs, and look at respiratory effort
- Inspect breasts for symmetry, dimpling, lumps
- Palpate abd, scrotum, etc
51Nursing DX- diagnostic phase
- Ineffective coping r/t fear of diagnosis
- Goal acceptance of need for medical evaluation
and treatment - Aeb patient seeks medical tx and evaluation
- (see pages 336-337)
52Interventions- diagnostic phase
- Ineffective copingencourage to learn the warning
signs - stress that medical evaluation is needed for
correct diagnosis - Anxiety remain hopeful, dont give false
reassurance, dont use clichés, recognize the pts
feelings - Explain procedures
53Treatment phase- assessment
- Obtain complete drug profile
- Review systems to check for those related to tx
- Assess pt knowledge
- Explore pt adaptations
- Physical exam note general appearance, LOC,
posture, gait, emotional state, head to toe assess
54Treatment phase- Nursing DX
- Anxiety related to effects and outcomes of tx
- Goal reduce anxiety aeb patient states anxiety
is reduced and demonstrates a relaxed manner - See page 338-339
55- Risk for injury
- Ineffective coping
- Anxiety
- Risk for infection
- Imbalanced nutritionlt less than body requirements
- See pages 339-342
56Recovery and rehab
- Periodic check ups
- Rehab restores pt to highest level of functioning
possible
57Terminal illness
- 2nd leading cause of death
- Oncology clinical nurse is great resource for the
patient
58Oncological emergencies
- Hypercalcemia
- Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone
(fluid does not come off) - Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)
- Superior Vena Cava Syndrome (redness/edema of
face, tachycardia, distended neck veins) - Teach client not to bend forward
- Spinal cord compression secondary to tumor
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