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Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

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Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics
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Page 1: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics

Page 2: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Neoplasia Outline

• Tumor nomenclature• Tumor characteristics • Epidemiology• Cancer pathogenesis

Page 3: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Neoplasia Outline

• Tumor nomenclature• Tumor characteristics

• Differentiation and anaplasia• Rate of growth• Local invasion• Metastasis

Page 4: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Neoplasia Outline

• Tumor nomenclature• Tumor characteristics

• Differentiation and anaplasia

Page 5: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

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

Page 6: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Thyroid adenoma (well-differentiated)

Page 7: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Squamous cell carcinoma, well-differentiated

Page 8: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Squamous cell carcinoma, moderately-differentiated

Page 9: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Squamous cell carcinoma, poorly-differentiated

Page 10: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Intercellular bridges

Page 11: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Differentiation and Anaplasia

• Literally, “to form (-plasia) backwards (ana-)”

• Misnomer! Cells don’t de-differentiate.

• Just means cells are very poorly-differentiated

• Almost always indicates malignancy

Anaplasia = a state of complete un-differentiation

Page 12: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Differentiation and Anaplasia

• Pleomorphism

• Hyperchromatic, large nuclei

• Bizarre nuclear shapes, distinct nucleoli

• Lots of mitoses, and atypical mitoses

• Architectural anarchy

Anaplastic cells show:

Page 13: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Anaplastic carcinoma

Page 14: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Abnormal mitoses

Page 15: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Differentiation and Anaplasia

• “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.

Dysplasia = disorderly (dys-) growth (-plasia)

Page 16: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Differentiation and Anaplasia

Dysplastic cells show:

• Pleomorphism

• Hyperchromatic, large nuclei

• Lots of mitoses

• Architectural anarchy

Page 17: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Q. Wait a minute, “dysplasia” sounds suspiciously similar to “differentiation” – what’s the difference?

Page 18: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Q. Wait a minute, “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.

Page 19: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

mild dysplasia

moderate dysplasia

severe dysplasia

well-differentiated

moderately-differentiated

poorly-differentiated

anaplastic

carcinoma in situ

Non-neoplastic epithelial cells

Neoplastic cells

Page 20: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.
Page 21: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Dysplasia

Page 22: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Normal glands

Page 23: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Normal gland

Page 24: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Mild dysplasia

Page 25: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Moderate dysplasia

Page 26: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Severe dysplasia

Page 27: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Normal squamous epithelium

Moderate dysplasia Severe dysplasia

Page 28: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Normal epitheliumDysplastic epithelium

Page 29: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Invasive squamous cell carcinoma

Page 30: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Neoplasia Outline

• Tumor nomenclature• Tumor characteristics

• Differentiation and anaplasia• Rate of growth

Page 31: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Rate of Growth

• Malignant tumors grow faster than benign ones.

• Poorly-differentiated tumors grow faster than well-differentiated ones.

• Growth is dependent on:• Blood supply• Hormonal factors• Emergence of aggressive sub-clones

Generalizations

Page 32: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Rate of Growth

• Age of tumor• Early on (subclinical), GF high. • Later (clinically detectable), GF low.

• Type of tumor• Leukemias, lymphomas, small-cell lung cancer: high GF• Breast, colon cancer: low GF

• Important for treatment• High GF tumor: treat with chemotherapy/radiation• Low GF tumor: treat by debulking

Growth fraction = cells that are actively dividing

Page 33: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.
Page 34: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.
Page 35: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Tumor cells undergoing apoptosis

Page 36: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.
Page 37: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.
Page 38: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.
Page 39: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Neoplasia Outline

• Tumor nomenclature• Tumor characteristics

• Differentiation and anaplasia• Rate of growth• Local invasion

Page 40: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Local Invasion

• Benign tumors• Stay where they are.• Can’t invade or metastasize.• Usually encapsulated.

• Malignant tumors• Infiltrate, invade, destroy surrounding tissue.• Then metastasize to other parts of body.• Not encapsulated.

Page 41: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Malignant tumor invading kidney

Page 42: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Malignant tumor invading kidney

Page 43: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Malignant tumor invading kidney

Page 44: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Neoplasia Outline

• Tumor nomenclature• Tumor characteristics

• Differentiation and anaplasia• Rate of growth• Local invasion• Metastasis

Page 45: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Carcinoma in situ

Page 46: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Invasive carcinoma

Page 47: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Invasive carcinoma

Page 48: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Metastasizing carcinoma

Page 49: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Liver with multiple metastases

Page 50: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Metastasis

• Metastasis = development of secondary tumor implants in distant tissues

• Half of all patients with malignancies have mets at the time of diagnosis!!

• Metastasis depends on:• Type of tumor • Size of tumor• Degree of differentiation of tumor

Page 51: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Metastasis

• Seeding

• Lymphatic spread

• Hematogenous spread

Three ways tumors metastasize

Page 52: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Metastasis

• Seeding• Tumor invades body cavity • Bits break off and implant on peritoneal surfaces• Ovarian cancer

Three ways tumors metastasize

Page 53: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Liver seeded with metastatic ovarian carcinoma

Page 54: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Metastasis

• Seeding

• Lymphatic spread• Tumor spreads to local lymph nodes • Sentinel lymph node first• Moves through thoracic duct• Empties into subclavian vein

Three ways tumors metastasize

Page 55: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Tumor in lymphatic

Page 56: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Tumor in lymph node

Page 57: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Tumor in lymph node

Page 58: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.
Page 59: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Metastasis

• Seeding

• Lymphatic spread• Tumor spreads to local lymph nodes • Sentinel lymph node first• Moves through thoracic duct• Empties into subclavian vein• Carcinomas like to spread this way

Three ways tumors metastasize

Page 60: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.
Page 61: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Metastasis

• Seeding

• Lymphatic spread

• Hematogenous spread• Veins are easier to invade than arteries• Liver and lungs are most common metastatic destinations• Some tumors like other sites better:

• prostate → bone• most lung cancers → adrenals, brain

• Sarcomas like to spread this way (but so do carcinomas)

Three ways tumors metastasize

Page 62: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.
Page 63: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Sarcoma metastatic to lung

Page 64: Kristine Krafts, M.D. | September 30, 2013 Neoplasia II: Tumor Characteristics.

Sarcoma metastatic to lung


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