Oncological management Flashcards

1
Q

Non-surgical management types

A
  • Cytotoxic chemotherapy (kills all cells, doesn’t differentiate well between cancerous/non-cancerous cells)
  • RT (done by clinical oncologists, not medical oncologists)
  • Targeted therapies
  • Immunotherapy (risk of inducing autoimmune reactions)
  • Endocrine
  • Bisphosphonates (breast cancer - reduce recurrence; also treats hyperCa2+ and bone mets)
  • Supportive care
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2
Q

Prognosis of different cancers.

a) Good
b) Bad

A

a) Testicular, prostate, breast, melanoma (note: even if metastatic, may have good treatments that mean they live for years)
b) Pancreas, UGI, lung, brain, thyroid?

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3
Q

Selecting candidates for treatment

a) Cancer features
b) Performance status

A

a) TNM, biology,

b) WHO grades 0-5 (>2 risks probably outweigh benefit)

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4
Q

Haematological (non-solid) cancers - managed by…?

A

Haematologists, not oncologists

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5
Q

Chemotherapy types

A
  • Radical (e.g. metastatic germ cell)
  • Adjuvant (after surgery) and neoadjuvant (before surgery) - reduce risk of local/distant relapse
  • Chemoradiotherapy (potentiates effect of RT; used in head and neck, anorectal, bladder, cervix; e.g. cisplatin)
  • Palliative - may improve QoL by reducing symptoms
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6
Q

Investigations

A

History and examination
Imaging of mass
Staging CT (generally CAP)
Biopsy and grading

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7
Q

Breast cancer drug management

A
- ER positive:
Pre-menopausal: tamoxifen 
Post-menopausal: aromatase inbibtor (anastrazole)
- HER positive: 
herceptin
- Other?
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8
Q

Radiotherapy

A
  • Stereotactic (gamma knife) - brain primaries and secondaries
  • Proton therapy
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9
Q

Endocrine treatment

A
  • Tamoxifen - selective oestrogen receptor modulator - breast Ca (pre-menopausal)
  • Aromatase inhibitors - breast Ca (post-menopausal only)
  • GnRH analogues - prostate Ca
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10
Q

Targeted therapies

A
  • Tyrosine kinase inhibitors - given in …?

- CDK4/6 inhibitors - given in breast Ca with aromatase inhibitors

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11
Q

Radiotherapy: side effects

a) Common skin problems (and management)
b) Other common issues
c) Site-specific: i) Head and neck, ii) Chest, iii) Abdo/ Pelvis

A

a) Acute radiation dermatitis: range from erythema and itching to blistering and ulceration. Manage with topical therapies
b) Fatigue

c) i) N/V, dry mouth, mouth sores, metallic taste, jaw stiff
ii) Breast tenderness, SOB, radiation pneumonitis/ fibrosis
iii) N/V, diarrhoea, bladder dysfunction, rectal bleeding, sexual dysfunction and infertility

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12
Q

Chemotherapy: side effects

think ‘loss’

A
  • Loss of hair
  • Loss of appetite and weight loss
  • Loss of muscle strength/ fatigue
  • Loss of cognitive function
  • Loss from back passage (diarrhoea)
  • Beau’s lines in nails
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13
Q

RT/chemo: late effects

A
  • Second cancer (esp. RT - cause skin cancer/thyroid)
  • Chest: HTN, CCF, arrhythmias, lung fibrosis
  • Endocrine: infertility, hypopituitarism, sexual dysfunction
  • Psychological: depression, anxiety, etc.
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14
Q

Most common treatment-related reasons for admission in oncology patients

A
  • Suspected neutropenic sepsis
  • Infection, not neutropenic
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Diarrhoea
  • Electrolyte imbalance (including tumour lysis)
  • Head and neck radiotherapy symptom management
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15
Q

Most common non-treatment related reasons for admission in oncology patients

A
  • Pain and symptom management
  • Oncology emergency (collapse)
  • Disease related symptoms (e.g. jaundice, hypercalcaemia)
  • Pulmonary embolus, DVT
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