Title: NEOPLASIA
1NEOPLASIA
- Basim S. Mohammed, M.D.
- Department Of Pathology Laboratory Medicine
- RWJMS-UMDNJ
- January
- 2005
2Facts
- ONE OUT OF FIVE (OR FOUR) PERSONS IN THE US WILL
DIE OF CANCER (gt 500,000 A YEAR) - gt 1.5 million NEW cases a year (not including a
million cases of NP skin cancers a year and not
pre-cancerous conditions) - THE SECOND TO IHD ATHEROSCLEROSIS AS A CAUSE OF
DEATH IN THE US - 1 in 2 lifetime risk for men, 1 in 3 lifetime
risk for women - SOME OF TUMORS ARE PREVENTABLE, SOME ARE EVEN
CURABLE. - Skin cancer is the most common human cancer and
one of the most preventable
3What Is NEOPLASIA
- CANCER
- TUMOR
- BENIGN
- MALIGNANT
- ONCOLOGY
- CLONALITY
- CARCINOMA
- SARCOMA
- METASTASES
- Loss of normal cell growth mechanisms to produce
tissue growth OUT of normal growth controls - "A neoplasm is an abnormal mass of tissue, the
growth of which exceeds and is uncoordinated with
that of the normal tissues and persists in the
same excessive manner after cessation of the
stimuli which evoked the change"
4- GRADE
- STAGE
- ANAPLASIA
- DYSPLASIACISINPRE-CANCER
- WHY CAN NOT WE USE THE ETIOLOGY TO CLASSIFY
TUMORS?
5Nomenclature
- ADENO CA
- SQUAMOUS CA
- ADENOMA
- LYMPHOMA
- LEUKEMIA
- MULTIPLE MYELOMA
- SARCOMA
6 7Tubular adenoma, colon
8Squamous cell carcinoma, skin
9SCC
10 11SCC, invasive, cevix
12(No Transcript)
13Osteosarcoma, femur
14SCC, skin
15Acute Myeloid Leukemia
16Pedunculated colon cancer
17Teratoma (Dermoid cyst), Ovary
18Teratoma, ovary
19Teratoma, ovary
20Multiple Myeloma
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23Causes of Cancer
- Environmental vs. Hereditary Cancers
- About 85 of cancers are estimated to be
environmentally induced - Exposure to environmental carcinogens (chemical,
radiation, viral) - Remainder of cancers inherited predisposition
- Mutation??
24Geographical and Ethnic Differences in Cancer
Incidence
- Nasopharyngeal CA
- Esophageal CA
- Stomach CA
- Colorectal CA
- Prostate CA
- Bladder CA
25(No Transcript)
26- The five-year survival rate.very variable
- Does not necessarily indicate the cure rate
- e.g. breast ca Melanoma
27Pre Cancerous Conditions
- Is Different from the In Situ concept
- eg
- Actinic Keratosis
- Lentigo Maligna
- Leukoplakia
- Villous adenoma of the GI
28(No Transcript)
29Why Tumors Are Different From Organs And Normal
Tissue?
- FUNCTION
- RATE OF GROWTH
- PARANEOPLASTIC SYNDROME
30What Are The Final Complications Of Malignancy
(Causes Of Death)
- PNEUMONIA
- PNEUMONIA
- PNEUMONIA
- CACHEXIA
- RENAL FAILURE
- BLEEDING
- SEVERE ANEMIA, THROBOCYTOPEINA
- INFECTIONS
- HYPERCOAGULABILITY
- DIC
- PAIN MORE OF DEVASTATING SYMPTOM THAN A
COMPLICATIONHAS TO BE CONTROLED
31Paraneoplastic Syndromes
- Remote effects not due to local effects of
primary tumor or its metastases - Fever
- Anorexia/weight loss
- Hypercalcemia
- Neurologic
- Hypercoagulable State
32(No Transcript)
33Some Explanation Of Why???
- ONCOGENE
- PROTO-ONCOGENE
- TUMOR SUPRESSOR GENE
34Retinoblastoma
35Retinblastoma
36Tumor ANGIOGENESIS
37Tumor Dormancy
- Tumors can recur years after treatment
- Breast cancer is especially noted for long
periods of dormancy
38Carcinogen
- Chemical carcinogens
- Physical carcinogens (UV, radiation, asbestos)
- Hormones
- Oncogenic microbes (mainly viruses)
- Sometime our weapon to kill the beast is a double
edge sword
39Viral Carcinogenesis
- Viral infections account for an estimated one in
seven human cancers worldwide - Majority of these are due to infection with two
DNA viruses - HBV linked to hepatocellular carcinonoma
- HPV linked to cervical carcinoma
- ..Other examples
- HTLV-1
- Kaposi Sarcoma.. HHV-8
40What Is the Evidence for the Genetic Basis of
Cancer?
- Some individuals show hereditary predisposition
- Individuals with impaired DNA repair systems show
increased cancer incidence - Cancer cells contain chromosome
abnormalities..e.g. translocations in leukemia
and lymphomas - Almost all mutagens are carcinogens
- Existence of oncogenes
41Multi-stage Nature of carcinogenesis
- Initiation
- Promotion
- Progression
42B Dysplasia pleiomorphic, large N/C ratio,
hyperchromatic nuclei
A normal pap smear. Cells large, well
differentiated, small N/C ratio
C Invasive squamous cell carcinoma
undifferentiated cells, multinucleated,
hyperchromatic nuclei, dense nucleoli. Large N/C
43The Good, The Bad The.
- DIFFERENTIATION
- SHAPE
- CAPSULE
- RATE OF GROWTH
- MITOSIS
- N/C RATIO
- CHROMASIA
- NUCLEOLUS
- PLEOMORPHISM
- INVASION
- METS
44Signs of malignant process..
45Well differentiated adenocarcinoma of the
endometrium, uterus
46The Good, The Bad The.
- DIFFERENTIATION
- SHAPE
- CAPSULE
- RATE OF GROWTH
- MITOSIS
- N/C RATIO
- CHROMASIA
- NUCLEOLUS
- PLEOMORPHISM
- INVASION
- METS
47 48Lipoma
49The Good, The Bad The.
- DIFFERENTIATION
- SHAPE
- CAPSULE
- RATE OF GROWTH
- MITOSIS
- N/C RATIO
- CHROMASIA
- NUCLEOLUS
- PLEOMORPHISM
- INVASION
- METS
50Abnormal mitotic figures
51Tripolar mitotic figure (abnormal)
52Signs of malignant process
53Benign Tumors
- SECRETIONS
- COMPRESSION
- TRANSFORMATION
- LOCALLY INVASIVE!!!
54Meningioma
55The Most Common
- CANCER IN MALE?
- CANCER IN FEMALE?
- KILLER IN MALE?
- KILLER IN FEMALE?
- 50 YS AGO WAS
56Prostatic adenocarcinoma
57Prostatic adenocarcinoma
58The Most Common
- CANCER IN MALE?
- CANCER IN FEMALE?
- KILLER IN MALE?
- KILLER IN FEMALE?
- 50 YS AGO WAS
59Invasive carcinoma of the breast
60Well differentiated ductal carcinoma, breast
Moderate to poorly differentiated ductal
carcinoma, breast
61The Most Common
- CANCER IN MALE?
- CANCER IN FEMALE?
- KILLER IN MALE?
- KILLER IN FEMALE?
- 50 YS AGO WAS
62Bronchogenic carcinoma, lung
63The Most Common
- CANCER IN MALE?
- CANCER IN FEMALE?
- KILLER IN MALE?
- KILLER IN FEMALE?
- 50 YS AGO WAS
64SCC, cervix
65Normal Squamous cells Malignant squamous
cellsnecrosis
66George Nicolas Papanicolaou 1883-1962
67Local Routes, Interstates, Turnpike..Routes Of
Spread
- WHAT EVER THE WAY, SOME LIKE TO GO TO FLORIDA,
OTHERS WILL PREFER ALASKA BUT SOME WILL GO
WHEREVER THEY LIKE. WHY? - STILLLLLLLL .?
- BUT WE KNOW THE MOST COMMON SITESLNS, 2L 2B
68Metastatic carcinoma , liver
69Metastatic carcinoma , liver
70Metastatic carcinoma , lung
71Biology of Invasion and Metastasis
- Invasion of the basement membrane
- Movement through extracellular matrix
- Penetration of vascular or lymphatic channels
- Survival and arrest within the circulating blood
or lymph - Exit from the circulation into new site
- Survival and growth as a metastasis
72Carcinoma in situ
Cancer cell becomes capable of invasion
(expresses surface adhesion molecules)
Tumor cells release proteolytic enzymes,
disruption of ECM Invade ECM
73Peritoneal carcinomatosis
74How Do We Get To The Diagnosis Of Malignancy?
- TEAM EFFORT
- CLINICAL ( TUMOR MARKERS, LABS)
- GROSS
- CYTOLOGY
- HISTOLOGY (IHC)
- Molecular pathologist and cytogenetist
- MOST IMPORTANT, EARLY DETECTION.
- LADIESNEVER UNDERESTIMATE THE PAAAAAAAAAAPPPP
MAMMOGRAMPLEASE
75Why How Do We Grade And Stage Tumors?
- 0-V
- TNM
- Tx, T0, Tis, T1-4
- Nx, N0, N1-3
- Mx, M0, M1
76Lung mass, CT scan
77(No Transcript)
78Immunohistochemistry
79Electron microscopy
80TREATMNT
- SURGERY
- RADIOTHERAPY
- CHEMOTHERAPY
- IMMUNOTHERAPY
- Hormones
- Gene therapyadvancing
- BMT
- CURATIVE VS PALLIATIVE
81References
- This lecture would not be possible except with
the aid of different textbooks, personal and
online material - I am mentioning here some of the web sites I used
to prepare this lecture - gtwww.pathguy.com .very useful for students, its
funny too - gtwww.mdconsult.com huge amount of everything
about medicine - gt And of course Robbin Cotran Pathologic basis
of diseases
82- THANK YOU
- WILL HAVE A BREAK FOR 5 MINUTES THEN WE HAVE A
CASE FOR DISCUSSION..QUICKKKK?