principles of cancer biology

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Principles of Cancer Biology P James Villeneuve, MDCM PhD FRCSC Division of Thoracic Surgery The University of Ottawa The Ottawa Hospital Surgical Foundations 2013.1.22

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Principles of Cancer Biology. P James Villeneuve, MDCM PhD FRCSC Division of Thoracic Surgery The University of Ottawa The Ottawa Hospital Surgical Foundations 2013.1.22. Outline. Basics Cell cycle Hallmarks of cancer Metastasis Radiotherapy Mechanism Chemotherapy Mechanism - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Principles of Cancer Biology

Principles of Cancer Biology

P James Villeneuve, MDCM PhD FRCSC

Division of Thoracic SurgeryThe University of OttawaThe Ottawa Hospital

Surgical Foundations 2013.1.22

Page 2: Principles of Cancer Biology

Outline

• Basics– Cell cycle– Hallmarks of cancer– Metastasis

• Radiotherapy– Mechanism

• Chemotherapy– Mechanism

• Surgical Oncology• Key points

Page 3: Principles of Cancer Biology

Tumourigenesis

Loss of balanceOncogenes > Suppressors

Page 4: Principles of Cancer Biology

Principles of Cellular Growth• Ability to produce exact replica

– essential component of life• Normal cellular regulation

– Balance between division and death (apoptosis)– Limits on proliferation

• Physical boundaries (e.g. basement membrane)• Tissue pressure contact inhibition

– Cell cycle regulation• Error correction

– Lack of fidelity in cellular reproduction genetic instability– Repair genes– Immune mechanisms: removal of non-self cells– Apoptosis

Page 5: Principles of Cancer Biology

Cell Cycle

• Organized unidirectional process to achieve identical cellular replicas– Compare to meiosis

• Mitosis– Process of chromosomal segregation and cytoplamic

division• Interphase

– Growth (gap) phases G1, G2 [G0]– Synthesis phase

Page 6: Principles of Cancer Biology

G1/S: adequate cellular growth to support replication

G2/M: full, accurate DNA replication

Spindle: Chromosomes aligned

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http://www.genome.jp/kegg/pathway/hsa/hsa04110.html

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Oncogenes : Oncoproteins

• Genetic sequence (gene) that causes cancer– Huebner and Todaro (1969)

• First described Src– Chicken virus causing sarcomas– Martin (1970)

• Proto-oncogene– Arising from mutations, increased expression,

translocations– Bishop and Varmus (1967): Nobel Prize 1989

• RAS, WNT, MYC, ERK, TRK, Ph’

Page 11: Principles of Cancer Biology

What is cancer then?

• Balance between oncogenic stimulus and tumuor suppressor activity

• Tumours are characterized by– 2 cell populations

• Actively dividing : Quiescent– Growth fraction

• Proportion in active division and proliferation– Growth rate

• Fraction dividing• Rate of division• Rate of attrition

Page 12: Principles of Cancer Biology

Tumour cell kinetics and you

• 1cm3 = 1g tumor ( 109) cells– 1 cm the limit of clinical detection– 30 doublings occurred prior to clinical detection

• Only 10 more doublings (3 logs)– 1kg of tumor– terminal disease

• 75% of tumour growth occurs prior to clinical detection

Page 13: Principles of Cancer Biology

Lethal tumour burden(1000g)

30 d

oubl

ing

times

10 doublings

Page 14: Principles of Cancer Biology

Hoeijmakers J (2009) NEJM 361:1475-85

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Vogelstein, Science (1991)Gastroenterology (2010) 138(6)2101-14

Page 16: Principles of Cancer Biology

Hanahan, Weinberg (2011) Cell 144:646-74

Page 17: Principles of Cancer Biology

Hanahan, Weinberg (2011) Cell 144:646-74

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The microenvironment is important

Hanahan, Coussens (2011) Cell 144:646-74

Page 20: Principles of Cancer Biology

Hanahan, Coussens (2011) Cell 144:646-74

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Hoeijmakers J (2009) NEJM 361:1475-85

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Radiotherapy

Surgery by non-surgical means

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Medscape

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Mechanism of action

• Ionizing radiation– Photon (gamma ray)– Beta particle (electron)– Alpha particle

• Mechanistically, based on tissue-particle interactions– Photoelectric effect– Compton effect

• Depth-energy-particle type dependence

Page 29: Principles of Cancer Biology

Delivery methods

• External beam– Most common– Radiation source is at distance from patient

• Brachytherapy– Radiation source is close or within tissue being treated

Page 31: Principles of Cancer Biology

Medscape

Deliver higher dosesPrevent tissue damageGreater kill due to redistribution of tumour

Page 32: Principles of Cancer Biology

Medscape

Repairable damage

Irreparable damage

Predicting tissue response

Page 33: Principles of Cancer Biology

Chemotherapy

Whole-body therapy

Page 34: Principles of Cancer Biology

Principles of Chemotherapy

• Exponential relationship between dose and kill– small decrease in drug dose results in large increase in cell

survival• Cycling cells at greatest risk• Multiple courses of therapy

– each treatment kills same proportion(not number) of cells

– e.g.: 3 log killed 1010 to 107

1 log regrowth between cycles

Page 35: Principles of Cancer Biology

Classes of chemotherapy agents

• Based on cell cycle• Phase-specifc

– Exhibit a dose-plateau• Phase insensitive

– Linear kill kinetics

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Phase insensitive

• Alkylating agents– Platinums– Mustards

• Typically have severe side effects– Bone marrow depression– Emetogenic

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Phase-sensitive agents

• S-phase drugs interfere with nucelotide synthesis– ‘false’ nucleotides– Cofactor antimetabolites

• M-phase drugs interfere with chromosomal segregation– Microtubule inhibitors

• G1/G2 phase agents intefere with basal cellular machinery

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Cancer surgery

Cures most solid tumors

Page 42: Principles of Cancer Biology

Surgery : Chemo : Radiotherapy

• Surgery is mostly oncology• Timing of treatment

– Neoadjuvant• Precedes surgical intervention• Aims to improve margins, decrease metabolic burden

– Adjuvant• Follows resection• For nodal disease

Page 43: Principles of Cancer Biology

Surgical Oncology Terms

• R = residual– R0 = complete resection– R1 = margins are microscopically positive– R2 = margins are grossly positive

• Stage and groupings– Based mostly on TNM classification– Stages are aggregates of TNM variables

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Key points

• Cancer arises from– Mutations– Cause dysregulation in key cellular functions– Oncogenes : suppressors

• Presentation of cancer– Depends on tumour burden– Depends on kinetics– Metastasis– Microenvironment

Page 48: Principles of Cancer Biology

Key points (2)

• Radiotherapy– DNA damage and ROS– Ionizing energy– Damages normal tissues

• Chemotherapy– Depends on agent used– Selective action on more rapidly dividing cells

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Key points (3)

• Diagnosis and staging lead to treatment• Understanding the concepts of tumourigenesis will

help understand the approach to cancer care

Page 50: Principles of Cancer Biology

Questions?