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Cancer

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Colorectal Cancer. Development of Colon Cancer. Eric Davis ... Screening for Colon Cancer. British advertising campaign to prompt screening for colon cancer. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cancer


1
Cancer
2
What is Cancer?
  • Group of diseases characterized by new cells that
    divide and grow unrestrained.
  • Johannes Muller discovered that tumors were made
    up of cells.
  • Neoplasm New growth. Neoplastic growths rob
    nutrients and provide no benefit to the organism

Ovarian Cancer Cell
3
Four Types of Malignant Growth
  • Carcinoma- Epithelial tissue cancers. Smooth
    linings of inner outer surfaces of body.
  • Sarcoma- Connective tissue involvement, bone,
    cartilage, and muscle.
  • Leukemia- Cancers arising in the blood, stem
    cells in bone marrow.
  • Lymphoma- Cancer of the lymphatic system.
  • Carcinomas account for about 85 of all cancers.
    Another 10 are Sarcomas and Leukemias.
  • Carcinoma rates increase with age. Sarcoma, which
    accounts for about 2 of cancers, has a constant
    rate across the lifespan

4
Carcinoma
  • Risk increases with age, probably due to
    cumulative effects of exposure to environmental
    carcinogens.

5
Types of Neoplasms
  • Benign Remain localized, in one place.
  • Malignant tend to spread, or metastasize, and
    establish secondary colonies. They destroy
    surrounding tissue
  • Cells seem to be limited to about 50 divisions in
    a lifetime. Cancer cell have no such limits and
    become like a parasite.

6
Metastasis
  • Refers to the ability of cancers to spread via
    the blood and lymph systems.
  • New cell colonies established at sites distant
    from the original tumor.

7
Metastasis
Vascularization
Growth of Tumor
Invasion
Attachment to endothelium
Transport Interaction with Vascular Components
Underlapping
Overlapping
Retraction
Invasion through Basement Membrane
Establishment of Micrometastases
8
Skin Cancers
  • Melanoma Most dangerous form of skin cancer
    because it metastasizes. Cancer arising in the
    Melanin, or skin pigment.
  • A Asymmetry
  • B Border Irregularity
  • C Color Variation
  • D Diameter 6 mm, or about the size of a
    pencil eraser

Maureen Reagan died of metastatic melanoma (brain
and bone involvement) in 2001 at age 60.
9
Basal and Squamous Cell Carcinomas
  • Basal cell carcinoma affects 800,000 Americans
    each year. It is the most common of all cancers
  • Squamous cell carcinoma, the second most common
    skin cancer, afflicts more than 200,000 Americans
    each year. Squamous cell cancers may occur on all
    areas of the body including mucous membranes.
  • Both are most common in areas exposed to the sun

Basal Cell Carcinoma
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
10
Kaposis Sarcoma
  • Rare form of skin cancer, but not uncommon among
    AIDS patients.
  • May be fatal if lungs or other internal organs
    are affected.

11
Breast Cancer
7 cents from the sale of each stamp went to fund
breast cancer research
12
Breast Anatomy
13
Ethnicity and Breast Cancer
14
Tamoxifen and Breast Cancer
15
Prostate Cancer
Prostate Anatomy
16
Prostate Cancer Deaths by Age
17
Digital Rectal Exam for Prostate Tumors
18
Prostate Cancer
Stage A Deep tumor. May not be detected by
digital-rectal exam
Stage B Tumor may be detected by DRE or
ultrasound
Stage D Metastasis to bone and lymph nodes
Stage C Spread to surrounding tissue
19
Trans-urethral Resection
20
Colorectal Cancer
21
Development of Colon Cancer
22
Eric Davis
  • In June 1997, at age 34, he underwent surgery to
    remove a baseball-sized colorectal cancer tumor.
    By September he was back in the line-up.

23
Screening for Colon Cancer
  • British advertising campaign to prompt screening
    for colon cancer.

24
Brain Cancer
  • Glioma, or cancer arising in the glial cells of
    the brain. Note its position inside a ventricle.

25
Brain Cancer
MRI showing no tumor (left) and three months
later (right)
26
Behavioral Risk Factors
  • Smoking
  • Diet
  • Alcohol
  • Exercise
  • Ultraviolet Light
  • Sexual Behavior

27
Smoking
  • Primary cause of preventable death in the U.S.
    (400,000/year)
  • About 90 of lung cancer cases are smoking
    related (80 in women).
  • Smoking is also related to other forms of cancer
    (e.g, bladder, pancreas, leukemia).
  • Relative risk of lung cancer is about 9 times
    greater in smokers than in nonsmokers.
  • Smokers tend to show and optimistic bias and
    underestimate the risks associated with smoking.

28
Safe Smoking?
  • Cigars and Pipes carry relative risks of 2.9 and
    2.5, respectively for lung cancer. Lower than for
    cigarettes, but still considered moderate.
  • Cigars Cigarettes RR 6.9
  • Pipes Cigarettes RR 8.1

29
Diet
30
Alcohol
  • Alcohol implicated in cancers of tonsils, tongue,
    pancreas, and liver.
  • Alcoholism associated with cirrhosis of the
    liver, and cirrhotic livers more prone to cancer.
  • Liver cancer is not a leading cause of death
    among alcoholics, however.
  • Alcohol interacts with smoking to increase risk
    of laryngeal cancer.

31
Exercise
32
Ultraviolet Light
  • Sun exposure, fair skin, and not using sunscreen
    are risk factors for skin cancer.
  • Lifetime exposure and occasional severe sunburn
    increase risk of skin cancer.
  • Wear sunscreen and protective clothing. Young,
    white men with no skin cancer history are the
    least likely to take precautions

Malignant melanoma is a form of skin cancer that
can be fatal. Other forms generally dont
contribute to cancer mortality.
33
Sexual Behavior
  • Kaposis Sarcoma and Non-Hodgkins Lymphoma are
    related to AIDS.
  • Invasive cervical cancer risk factors
  • 1. Multiple partners
  • 2. Low SES
  • 3. Early 1st sexual experience
  • 4. Early pregnancies
  • 5. Male sex partners who have had
    multiple partners

34
Environmental Risk Factors
  • Radiation
  • Asbestos
  • Pesticides
  • Benzene
  • Nickel
  • Vinyl Chloride
  • Some Petroleum Products

35
Environmental Risk Factors Evidence
  • Nuclear power plant workerscancer death rates
    increase with increased radiation exposure (men
    only).
  • Also, death rates from cardiovascular disease
    (men and women) and accidents (men only)
    increased.
  • Radiation exposure contributes to all-cause
    mortality in these workers

Living near a nuclear power plant does not
increase cancer risk.
36
Power Lines
  • No evidence that living near power lines
    increases cancer risk.
  • Occupational exposure to magnetic fields also
    unrelated to cancer risk.

37
Aspartame
  • No evidence that Aspartame (Nutrasweet) is
    related to brain cancer.
  • Aspartame is metabolized to aspartic acid,
    phenylalanine, and methanol, which occur
    naturally in larger quantities in many other
    foods.
  • Because it breaks down into these components
    before absorption, it has no opportunity to
    affect organs.

38
Inherent Risk Factors
  • Family History
  • Ethnic Background
  • Age

39
Family History
40
Ethnic Background
41
Age
42
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45
Psychological Risk Factors
  • Depression no clear relationship to cancer. No
    relationship between depression and incidence of
    cancer and no evidence of a causal relationship

46
Suppression of Emotion
  • No evidence of a cancer-prone, or Type C
    personality.
  • Suppression of emotion shows a consistent
    relationship with cancer incidence.

47
30-year Prospective Follow-up Study of Emotional
Suppression and Cancer Incidence
1 Cancer Incidence
Acting Out
Loners
Emotional Suppression
16 Cancer Incidence
30 years later
Beginning of Study
  • Shaffer, J.W., Graves, P.L., Swank, R.T.,
    Pearson, T.A. (1987). Clustering of personality
    traits in youth and subsequent development of
    cancer among physicians. Journal of Behavioral
    Medicine, 10, 441-447.

48
Cancer Survival and Psychosocial Factors
  • Cancer patients who are depressed, anxious,
    guilty, and alienated live longer than
    hopeless/helpless patients. Fighting Spirit.
  • Married cancer patients live longer than
    unmarried cancer patients, even when controlling
    for early diagnosis and treatment among married
    patients.
  • Married patients have a greater degree of social
    support and more extensive social networks.
    These provide
  • 1. Access to information
  • 2. Sense of personal control
  • 3. Self Esteem
  • 4. Optimism

49
Psychotherapy and Survival
  • Psychotherapy can help alleviate stress and
    increase sense of well-being.
  • The ability of psychotherapy to extend survival
    time is less well-established.
  • Speigel, et.al, (1989) found that women with
    metastatic breast cancer lived about 18 months
    longer if they received weekly, 90-minute,
    support group meetings, compared to women who
    received only medical treatment. Assignment to
    treatment conditions was random.

50
Psychotherapy and Survival
  • Review of literature on psychotherapy and cancer
    survival was less impressive. Some studies were
    able to show a benefit, some were not.
  • Studies that showed a benefit for psychotherapy
    had the following components
  • 1. Social support
  • 2. Group therapy with patients who
  • have the same cancer
  • 3. An educational component
  • 4. Training in coping strategies
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