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Neoplasia. Why do we need a lecture about neoplasia?. 1- To understand patients better 2- To understand All neoplasms better 3- To nail the neoplasia questions on boards - This lecture covers: - the nature of benign and malignant neoplasms - how neoplasms start and grow
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Why do we need a lecture about neoplasia? 1- To understand patients better 2- To understand All neoplasms better 3- To nail the neoplasia questions on boards - This lecture covers: - the nature of benign and malignant neoplasms - how neoplasms start and grow - Later lectures will cover: - the nature of specific neoplasms - how these neoplasms affect the patient
Neoplasia Outline 1- Tumor nomenclature 2- Tumor characteristics 3- Epidemiology 4- Cancer pathogenesis
* Tumor nomenclature 1- Definitions 2- Benign tumors 3- Malignant tumors 4- Mixed tumors 5- Confusing terms
- Neoplasm = mass of tissue that grows excessively, and keeps growing even if you remove the stimulus that started it off! - Tumor = neoplasm - Benign tumor = innocent-acting tumor - Malignant tumor = evil-acting tumor *Tumor nomenclature - *Definitions
Definitions • Small • Slow-growing • Non-invasive • Well-differentiated • Stay localized • Large • Fast-growing • Invasive • Poorly-differentiated • Metastasize Benign Tumors Malignant Tumors
The only indisputable quality of malignancy is metastasis! Benign tumors CANNOT metastasize; malignant tumors CAN. If it is metastatic, it MUST BE malignant.
- Tumor nomenclature - Definitions -*Benign tumors
Benign Tumors * Usually designated by adding “-oma” to cell type - adenoma– benign tumor arising from glandular cells - leiomyoma– benign tumor arising from smooth muscle cells - chondroma – benign tumor arising from chondrocytes * Other benign tumor names - papilloma – has finger-like projections - polyp – projects upward, forming a lump - cystadenoma– has hollow spaces (cysts) inside
Thyroid adenoma Thyroid adenoma Normal thyroid
Leiomyoma Chondroma
- Tumor nomenclature - Definitions - Benign tumors -* Malignant tumors
Malignant Tumors - Carcinomas – arise in epithelial tissue - adenocarcinoma – malignant tumor of glandular cells - squamous cell carcinoma – malignant tumor of squamous cells - Sarcomas – arise in mesenchymal tissue - chondrosarcoma – malignant tumor of chondrocytes - angiosarcoma – malignant tumor of blood vessels - rhabdomyosarcoma – malignant tumor of skeletal muscle cells
Adenocarcinoma Squamous cell carcinoma
Chondrosarcoma Angiosarcoma Rhabdmyosarcoma
- Tumor nomenclature • Definitions • Benign tumors • Malignant tumors - * Mixed tumors
Mixed Tumors - “Mixed” tumors show divergent differentiation - Examples - pleomorphic adenoma – glands + fibromyxoid stroma - fibroadenoma – glands + fibrous tissue -Not to be confused with teratomas
-Tumor nomenclature 1- Definitions 2- Benign tumors 3- Malignant tumors 4- Mixed tumors 5- *Confusing terms
Confusing Terms 1- Malignant tumors that sound benign - lymphoma - mesothelioma - melanoma - seminoma 2- Non-tumors that sound like tumors - hamartoma – mass of disorganized indigenous tissue - choristoma – heterotopic rest of cells 3- Names that seem to come out of nowhere - nevus - leukemia - hydatidiform mole
Nomenclature Neoplasm Benign Malignant Carcinoma Sarcoma
Nomenclature Neoplasm Benign Malignant adenoma angioma rhabdomyoma Carcinoma Sarcoma
Nomenclature Neoplasm Benign Malignant Carcinoma Sarcoma squamous cell carcinoma adenocarcinoma
Nomenclature Neoplasm Benign Malignant Carcinoma Sarcoma angiosarcoma rhabdomyosarcoma
Neoplasia Outline - Tumor nomenclature - Tumor characteristics - Epidemiology - Cancer pathogenesis
- Tumor nomenclature - Tumor characteristics : 1- Differentiation and anaplasia 2- Rate of growth 3- Local invasion 4- Metastasis
- Tumor nomenclature - Tumor characteristics 1- Differentiation and anaplasia
Differentiation and Anaplasia - Differentiation = how much the tumor cells resemble their cells of origin - well-differentiated – closely resembles - moderately-differentiated – sort of resembles - poorly-differentiated – doesn’t resemble - Benign tumors are usually well-differentiated - Malignant tumors can show any level of differentiation
Squamous cell carcinoma, well-differentiated Squamous cell carcinoma, moderately-differentiated Squamous cell carcinoma, poorly-differentiated
Differentiation and Anaplasia Anaplasia = a state of complete un-differentiation Literally, “to form (-plasia) backwards (ana -)” Misnomer! Cells don’t de-differentiate. Just means cells are very poorly-differentiated Almost always indicates malignancy
Differentiation and Anaplasia • Anaplastic cells show: - Pleomorphism - Hyperchromatic, large nuclei - Bizarre nuclear shapes, distinct nucleoli - Lots of mitoses, and atypical mitoses - Architectural anarchy
Anaplastic carcinoma Abnormal mitoses
Differentiation and Anaplasia Dysplasia = disorderly (dys -) growth (-plasia) - “Dysplasia” is used to describe disorderly changes in non- neoplastic epithelial cells. - Graded as mild, moderate or severe. • Mild-moderate: usually reversible • Severe: usually progresses to carcinoma in situ (CIS). - Next step after CIS: invasive carcinoma.
Differentiation and Anaplasia • Dysplastic cells show: • - Pleomorphism • - Hyperchromatic, large nuclei • - Lots of mitoses • - Architectural anarchy
“dysplasia” sounds suspiciously similar to differentiation” – what’s the difference? • A. Both terms describe whether cells look normal or not! • But: • “differentiation” is only used with neoplastic cells, and “dysplasia” is only used with non-neoplastic cells! • “dysplasia” is only used with epithelial cells, but “differentiation” can apply to any cell type.
Non-neoplastic epithelial cells carcinoma in situ mild dysplasia moderate dysplasia severe dysplasia Neoplastic cells moderately-differentiated poorly-differentiated well-differentiated anaplastic
Moderate dysplasia Mild dysplasia Severe dysplasia
Normal squamous epithelium Moderate dysplasia Severe dysplasia
Dysplastic epithelium Normal epithelium Invasive squamous cell carcinoma