1 / 14

Mrs PC, 63yo woman

Mrs PC, 63yo woman. Initially presented with chronic RIF pain Found to have cholelithiasis , underwent a laparoscopic cholecystectomy On the laparoscopy, nothing abnormal was noted in the abdomen The pain persisted. Medical History. Panic attacks Varicose veins Cholelithiasis

ryder-watts
Télécharger la présentation

Mrs PC, 63yo woman

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mrs PC, 63yo woman • Initially presented with chronic RIF pain • Found to have cholelithiasis, underwent a laparoscopic cholecystectomy • On the laparoscopy, nothing abnormal was noted in the abdomen • The pain persisted

  2. Medical History • Panic attacks • Varicose veins • Cholelithiasis • Distant ex-smoker (ages 18-27)

  3. Family History • Mother: ovarian ca (age 70+) • Maternal aunt: breast ca (age ~70) • Father: lung ca (smoker)

  4. HOPC (cont.) • Went on to have transvaginal ultrasound, which showed a cystic lesion on the R) ovary • CT and PET scan showed: • Large avid pelvic mass • Avid serosal/peritoneal areas elsewhere • Small volume ascites in the pelvis which was mildly avid • Underwent laparotomy for radical debulking and biopsies

  5. Pathology • Histology showed multicystic mucinous cells on samples of: • Serosal surface of the ovaries and fallopian tubes • R) and L) parametria • R) pelvic side wall • Staining: • Strong, diffuse CK7 and CDX2 positivity • Patchy CK20 positivity • ER negative • Felt by pathologist to be of pancreatobiliary origin

  6. DIAGNOSIS • Adenocarcinoma of unknown primary • Possibly pancreatobiliary source • Distribution of disease not

  7. Treatment • Following surgery, was given chemotherapy • FOLFOX + Avastin • Had an adverse drug reaction to oxyplatin x2 • Maintenance treatment  Xeloda • Achieved complete metabolic remission (on PET) for a period of 4-5 months

  8. RECURRENCE • 6 weeks ago, PET showed: • Avid serosal/peritoneal deposits on sigmoid colon • Avid peritoneal fluid in the pelvis • Started on chemotherapy • CBDCA + Paclitaxel + Avastin

  9. Treatment Complications Acute: • Oxyplatin hypersensitivity • Fatigue • Dry skin • Mucosal ulcers • Occasional nausea Permanent: • Incisional hernia • Peripheral neuropathy, stable • Manifest as paraesthesia and neuropathic pain in feet and fingers • Nil trouble with weakness, gait disturbance, unsteadiness, falls • Some trouble with getting out medications as a result

  10. Carcinoma of unknown primary (CUP) • Heterogenous group of metastatic cancers where the primary site cannot be found • Small primaries may remain undetected • Primaries may have regressed • Primaries may be incidentally removed in treatment for other conditions • Accounts for 3% of cancer diagnoses • As they are heterogenous, they vary widely in prognosis and response to specific treatments

  11. Classifying CUp • Clinical manifestations • i.e. isolated axillary lymphadenopathy in women vs. peritoneal disease • Pathological examination • Cytology • Immunohistochemistry • Gene expression profiling

  12. Cytology • May differentiate tissue of origin but will not definitively determine primary site • SCC is likely to have come from respiratory tract, but may come from skin • Adenocarcinoma is particularly troublesome, as it may originate in many organs • Very poorly differentiated cancers may not be identifiable

  13. Immunohistochemistry • Involves stains for specific proteins which may help to predict the primary site • CK7 and CK20 are commonly tested initially • Results of initial stains inform selection of further stains • The amount of tissue is often a limiting factor • IHC staining algorithms have been shown to predict the primary site correctly in approximately two thirds of cancers with KNOWN primary in blinded studies

  14. Gene expression profiling • Tests gene expression of malignant cells using techniques such as rt-PCR and microarrays • Focuses on genes which help delineate organ of origin • Assays may test for up to 92 genes to delineate between up to 42 tumour types • GEP assays have been shown to predict the primary site correctly in approximately 85% of cancers with KNOWN primary in blinded studies (probably closer to 75% of CUP) • In CUP studies, shows ~78% concordance with IHC predictions • When IHC is more definitive (i.e. predicts single tumour type), GEP is more highly concordant than when IHC is ambiguous

More Related