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Altered Cell Growth and Cancer Development

Altered Cell Growth and Cancer Development. Iggy—Chapter 27. Characteristics of Normal Cells. Have limited cell division Specific morphology Small nuclear cytoplasmic ratio Perform specific differentiated functions Adhere tightly together Are non-migratory

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Altered Cell Growth and Cancer Development

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  1. Altered Cell Growth and Cancer Development Iggy—Chapter 27

  2. Characteristics of Normal Cells • Have limited cell division • Specific morphology • Small nuclear cytoplasmic ratio • Perform specific differentiated functions • Adhere tightly together • Are non-migratory • Grow in an orderly and well-regulated manner • Are contact inhibited

  3. Mitosis of Normal Cells Cell Cycle • G1 • S • G2 • M • G0 http://www.cellsalive.com/cell_cycle.htm

  4. Abnormal Cells • Hypertrophy—increase in tissue size by enlarging each cell. • Hyperplasia—increase in tissue size by increasing the number of cells • Neoplasia—new cell growth not needed for normal body growth or replacement of dead or missing tissue.

  5. Characteristics of Benign Cells • Continuous or inappropriate cell growth • Specific morphology • Small nuclear cytoplasmic ratio • Perform differentiated functions • Adhere tightly together • Are non-migratory • Grow in an orderly manner

  6. Characteristics of Malignant Cells • Rapid or continuous cell division • Anaplastic morphology • Large nuclear cytoplasmic ratio • Lose some or all differentiated functions • Adhere loosely together • Are able to migrate • Grow by invasion • Are not contact inhibited

  7. Cancer Development • Carcinogenesis/oncogenesis • Malignant transformation-changes a normal cell to a cancer cell • 4 stages • Initiation • Promotion • Progression • Metastasis

  8. Metastasis • The breaking off and establishing remote tumors • Metastatic • Secondary

  9. Metastasis • Extension into surrounding tissues • Penetration in blood vessels • Release of tumor cells • Invasion of tissue at site of arrest • Local seeding • Blood-borne metastasis • Lymphatic spread

  10. Steps of metastasis

  11. Cancer Classification • From type of cell they arise from • Biologic behaviors • Anatomical sites • Degree of differentiation • 2 major types • Solid • Hematologic

  12. Cancer Grade and Stage • Grading • High grade • Low grade • Staging • Clinical • Surgical • Pathologic

  13. TNM • (T) Tumor • Tx – unable to assess • T4 – larger number signifies increasing size • (N) Node • Nx – unable to assess • N3 – increased node involvement • (M) Distant Metastasis • Mx – unable to assess • M1 – no distant mets • M2 – distant mets

  14. Cancer Etiology and Genetic Risk • Oncogene activation • External factors • Chemical • Physical • Radiation • Chronic irritation • Viral

  15. Advancing age is the single most important risk factor for cancer • 77% of cancer is in people age 55 or older • The older a person is, the less ability their immune system retains to repair mutations that occur

  16. Genetic testing for cancer • Requires a blood sample • Very expensive • Frequently not covered by insurance • Does not diagnose the presence of cancer

  17. Prevention • Primary • Secondary • Chemoprevention • Gene therapy

  18. Seven Warning Signs of Cancer • C – Changes in bowel or bladder • A – A sore that does not heal • U – Unusual bleeding or discharge • T – Thickening or lump in breast or elsewhere • I – Indigestion or dysphagia • O – Obvious change in wart or mole • N – Nagging cough or hoarseness

  19. General Intervention for Clients with Cancer Iggy—Chapter 28

  20. Common Problems • Impaired immune and hematopoietic function • Altered gastrointestinal tract structure and function • Motor and sensory deficits • Decreased respiratory function • Treatment-related consequences

  21. Ways to Treat Cancer • Surgery • Radiation • Chemotherapy

  22. Surgery • Prophylaxis • Diagnosis • Cure • Control (debulking) • Palliation • Therapy effectiveness • Reconstructive or rehabilitative

  23. Radiation • Kills cancer cells with minimal exposure of normal cells to radiation • Cells damaged by radiation either die or become unable to divide • Works best in localized tumors

  24. Penetrating capacity ofdifferent types of radiation

  25. Radiation Administration • Amount of radiation delivered to a tissue is called “exposure” • Amount of radiation absorbed by the tissue is called the “dose” • Total dose depends on the tumor location and its sensitivity to radiation • Doses are given in fractionation divided over the treatment time span

  26. Types of Radiation Therapy • Teletherapy – beam radiation • Brachytherapy – short or dose therapy • All types—radiation source is placed in the patient—making the patient emit radiation and be a hazard to others for a short time • Unsealed isotope—example is radioactive iodine concentrate (thyroid gland) • Sealed—Seeds (prostate Ca) short half life, usually left in place • Implants—constant in hospital several or intermittent in and out of clinic over a period of time

  27. The Inverse Square Lawof Radiation Exposure • The intensity of radiation decreases with distance from the radiation source.

  28. Side Effects of Radiation • Limited to areas of exposure • Skin changes and hair loss usually permanent • Care of patient receiving radiation includes: • Teaching • Don’t remove radiation markings • Skin care to radiated areas • No lotions or creams, use radigel provided by radiologist

  29. Chemotherapy • Used for both cure and to increase survival time • Works best for systemic (mets) • May be used in combination with surgery and/or radiation (adjuvant)

  30. Chemotherapy • Antimetabolites—counterfeit metabolites that fool cancer cells • Antitumor antibiotics—interrupts DNA/RNA synthesis • Alkylating agents—cross links DNA-2 strands bind together, inhibiting cell division

  31. Chemotherapy, cont. • Antimitotic agents—usually made from plant sources, prevents completion of mitosis • Topoisomerase inhibitors—prevents enzyme from copying and reattaching, causing DNA breakage and cell death • Miscellaneous—doesn’t fit anywhere else • Combination

  32. Total Body Surface Area • BSA, TBSA, PSA • Height and weight • Ht (cm) x wt (Kg) / 10,000 = TBSA • 5’11’’ tall and weighs 186 pounds What is his TBSA?

  33. Calculating TBSA • 5’11’’ = 71 inches = 180.34 • 185# = 84.1 KG • 180.34 X 84.4 10,000 • BSA = 1.52

  34. Scheduling and Administration • Schedule treatment every 3-4 weeks for the total (Course) of 6-12 months • Administration • PO or Im • Mostly given IV (CVL or pIV) • Intra-thecal • Intra-arterial • Intra-peritoneal • Intra-vesical

  35. Extravasation • Irritants • Vesicants • Most important nurse action is prevention • What do you do if an extravasation happens?

  36. How does chemo work? • Cancer cells divide continously • Chemo kills during cell division • Chemo kills good cells as well as bad cells • http://www.cancer.org/docroot/ETO/content/ETO_1_2X_Chemotherapy_What_It_Is_How_It_Helps.asp • http://www.cancer.org/docroot/ETO/content/ETO_1_4X_How_Does_Chemotherapy_Work.asp?sitearea=ETO

  37. Side Effects of Chemotherapy • Immunosuppression • Anemia • Thrombocytopenia • Alopecia • Nausea and vomiting • Mucositis

  38. Hair loss is usually temporary and does reverse Alopecia

  39. Can continue for 5-7 days s/p chemotherapy Give antiemetics Avoid spicy or rich foods, strong smells, and extreme hot or cold liquids Nausea and Vomiting

  40. Mucositis • Soft bristled toothbrush • Avoid toothpicks and dental floss • Avoid mouthwashes that contain alcohol • Do frequent mouth care • Give pain meds PRN

  41. Immunosuppression • Nadir—lowest point in blood counts s/p chemo • Usually seen in 5-10 days • Neutropenia – WBC below 1000 • Patient is at extreme risk for infection • Major dose limiting side effect of chemotherapy

  42. Anemia • Hgb below 8—transfuse • S/S fatigue and SOB

  43. Thrombocytopenia • Decreased platelets • Below 50,000—bleeding precautions • Below 20,000—high risk • Transfuse with platelets • Educate and protect patient

  44. Immunotherapy: Biological Response Modifiers • Stimulates the production of bone marrow • Cytokines—interferon, interleukins, epogen, G-CSF, GM-CSF

  45. Hormonal Manipulation • Some hormones make homes-sensitive tumors grow more rapidly—so decreasing amount of hormone in body can cause tumor growth to slow. • Types • Agonists • Antagonists • Inhibitors

  46. Gene Therapy • Experimental • Has shown limited response rates, but indicates potential for future treatment.

  47. Targeted Therapy • Combination of gene therapy and biologic therapy to target specific cells • Examples: herceptin and gleevac • Most common side effect is allergic reactions

  48. Oncological Emergencies • Sepsis • Disseminated intravascular coagulation • Syndrome of inappropriate antidiurectic hormone • Spinal cord compression • Hypercalcemia • Superior vena cava syndrome • Tumor lysis syndrome

  49. Sepsis • Septic shock • Life threatening • 1st get blood cultures and urine culture • 2nd start antibiotics

  50. DIC (70% mortality rate) • Blood clotting problem often caused by sepsis (gram negative infection) in cancer patients. • Release of clotting factors from cancer cells cause excessive abnormal clot formation in small blood vessels, which use up the clotting factors and platelets in the blood.

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