What are the principles of surgical resection of a tumour?
What are the principles of treatment in relation to the TNM grading of tumours?
T1 and T2: Radical surgery
- aim is to cure the disease
T3: Radical surgery +/- combination treatment (radio/chemotherapy)
T4: Radical/palliative surgery + combination treatment
- aim = achieve long disease free survival
Node -ve (N0): usually don’t have any additional treatment
Node +ve (N1-2): combination treatment with curative intent
Node +ve (N3): combination treatment with palliative intent
M1: combination of surgery,. radiotherapy and chemotherapy
What are the two different surgical approaches to removing tumours?
What are the complications on surgery in cancer?
What methods are there for controlling the recurrence of cancer? Give examples of types of cancer where this is important.
Where do each of these cancer usually metastasise to?
Why might cancer recur?
What is percutaneous radio frequency ablation?
*ideally tumour is surrounded by hepatic parenchyma at least 1cm deep to liver capsule and 2cm away from major structures
What is cryoablation?
What can hepatic artery infusion pump be used for?
To pump into the blood supply the liver allowing chemotherapy medication to be delivered directly into the liver
What is chemoembolisation?
Catheter enters through the skin into femoral artery
chemoembolisation mixture is administered to the carcinoma through the catheter
microspheres injected during chemoembolisation ‘lock in’ chemotherapy
What is radioembolisation? What type of cancer is it mostly used in?
Enters through a Cather from the groin
placing radio-active beads into the artery that supplies the tumour to cause cell death
radioactive isotop Yttrium 90 is incorporated into the beads to deliver radiation directly to the tumour
*used in metastatic colorectal cancer
What are the different types of surgery in oncology?