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Hematology/ Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

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Page 1: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Hematology/Oncology

Brought to You By:Group 7

Page 2: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

What is not a likely clinical manifestation of leukemia?

Petechiae & Mucosal Bleeding

Bone Pain

Hyperleukocytosis

Decreased WBC Count

Page 3: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

None of the Above

Leukemia has a wide range of clinical manifestations including anorexia, bone and joint pain, CNS complications, and symptoms of pancytopenia (a decrease in all cell lines). The most dramatic presentation is of hyperleukocytosis when the WBC count is significantly elevated.

Page 4: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

A 45 year old female comes into your office complaining of swollen lymph nodes, bone pain, and easy bruising and bleeding. Patient states that her symptoms started about 4 years ago but did not get worse until the past 3-6 months. Upon bloodwork, there is markedly increased blast count on peripheral blood smear. What is the least likely diagnosis?

Page 5: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia

Acute Myelogenous Leukemia

Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia

Hodgkins Lymphoma

Page 6: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

C. Hodgkin’s Lymphoma.

The presence of blasts points towards a leukemia rather than a lymphoma and an acute processs is very likely. The Chronic myelogenous leukemia cannot be ruled out because they have a blast crisis especially end stage CML.

Page 7: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

A 9 year old Caucasian boy complains of a sudden onset of easy bruising, frequent nose bleeds, loss of appetite, and flu like symptoms. Upon blood tests, you find circulating blasts and a negative myeloperoxidase stain. What is the most likely diagnosis? Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Acute Myelogenous Leukemia Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia

Page 8: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

C. ALL. The symptoms and presence of blasts indicate it is an acute process and the negative myeloperoxidase stain points towards a lymphocytic origin. ALL would also have a positive CALLA

Page 9: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

A 75 year old male comes in for an annual history and physical exam. During the physical exam, you find lymphadenopathy in the submandibular lymph nodes. Upon bloodwork, you find lymphocytosis with smudge cells. Patient is asymptomatic but you diagnosis him with leukemia. What would be the most appropriate treatment? Steroids Chemotherapy IV immunoglobulin No treatment

Page 10: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

D. No treatment because the clinical presentation points to Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia and there has been no demonstrated benefit to treating the process early. Once the patient starts experiencing symptoms, the other choices are all possible treatment options.

Page 11: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

A 30 year old female present with painless LAD in the axillary, inguinal, and femoral lymph nodes with fever, chills, fatigue and night sweats. You diagnose her with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. According to the Ann Arbor staging, what stage is the patient in? Stage IIIb Stage II Stage III Stage IIb

Page 12: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

A. Stage IIIb. Patient has 2 or more lymph nodes on both sides of the diaphragm. In addition she has “B-symtoms.” The B adds a worse prognosis to the disease.

Page 13: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

A patient presents with splenomegaly and diffuse painless lymphadenopathy including the lymphoid tonsillar tissue and mesenteric nodes for the past 3 months. Patient is also experiencing fatigue, weight loss, and night sweats. What is the most likely diagnosis? Hodgkin’s Lymphoma Non- Hodgkin’s lymphoma Multiple Myeloma Hairy Cell Leukemia

Page 14: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

B. Non- Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. The presentation points toward a lymphoma over mutiple myeloma and hairy cell leukemia. The lymphoid tonisllar tissue aka Waldeyers ring and mesenteric lymph nodes are suggestive of Non- Hodgkins. Another common site of LAD is the epitrochlear nodes. Hodgkin’s and Non- Hodgkin’s have similar presentations but they are distinguishable on microscopic exam.

Page 15: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

What is the most common electrolyte abnormality in Multiple Myeloma? Hypocalcemia Hypokalemia Hypercalcemia Hyperkalemia

Page 16: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

C. Hypercalcemia. This is from bone breakdown. Marrow infiltration processed often affect the bone, and causes bone pain, osteoporosis, lytic lesions and fractures. The hypercalcemia caused confusion, weakness, constipation, and polyuria.

Page 17: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

What findings would support the diagnosis of Multiple Myeloma? Monoclonal Spike on serum protein electrophoresis Bence Jones Protein in the urine Reuleaux formation on CBC Multiple lytic lesions in skeleton on x-ray All of the above

Page 18: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

E. All of the above. These finding all correlate with multiple myeloma. The M spike is due to increased immunoglobulins in the blood. The Bence Jones protein form due to cleavage of antibodies. Reuleaux forms due to RBC stacking on eachother due to hyperviscosity.

Page 19: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

True or False?

M- spike, Releaux formation, and Bence Jones proteins are findings specific to Mutiple Myeloma

Page 20: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

False

M-spike, Reuleaux formation, and Bence Jones proteins are found in other disease processes, specifically all three of those are in Waldenstrom’s macroglobulinemia, which is a big differential. However, in this disease, there is no bony lesions and therefore no hypercalcemia. Lytic lesions must be present to diagnose Multiple Myeloma.

Page 21: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

A 32 yr old female has been complaining of bleeding from the gums for a while. She has a history of menorrhea for the last three months. Blood test revealed prolonged bleeding time and PTT and we do factor 8 levels. Normal platelet and normal PT. What is the most likely diagnosis? Von Willebrand disease Hemolytic uremic syndrome Acquired platelet dysfunction Drug-induced thrombocytopenia None of the above

Page 22: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

Von Willebrand disease diagnosis- prolonged bleeding time, decreased plasma vWf, characterisic abnormalities in platelet aggregation tests; factor 8 deficiency which leads to a prolonged PTT with normal platelet and normal PT.

Its not Hemolytic uremic syndrome b/c that contains a normal PT/PTT

Its not Acquired platelet dysfunction b/c both PT/PTT are prolonged

Its not Drug-induced thrombocytopenia b/c no hx of drugs usuage

Page 23: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

When a patient is on Coumadin, what laboratory values should be closely monitored? PTT Immunoglobulins PT BUN/CR Both a and c

Page 24: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

C. PT

Coumadin works specifically on the extrinsic pathway and on PT while heparin works on the intrinsic pathway and on PTT

Page 25: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

A 6yr old male complains of petechia and ecchymosis on the lower extremities and back following minimal traumas for two days. The child received an antibiotic a week ago because he had a URI. On the lab test, it revealed platelet autobodies. What is the first line treatment for this diagnosis? IV immunoglobulin G Oral steroids DDAVP Splenectomy Vitamin K supplements

Page 26: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

IV Immunoglobulin G

This is ITP and it occurs in a child which is most common in the acute self-limited form. The treatment would be IV immunoglobulin G as the first line and second line would be oral steroids. The IV immunoglobulin IgG will suppress the autoantibody production.

Page 27: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

A 42 yr old female presents with altered mental status, hemolytic anemia, a fever of 101, low platelet count and increase BUN and Creatinin. PT and PTT are normal and decreased hemoglobin and hematocrit. What is the diagnosis? TTP HUS ITP DIC TPA

Page 28: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

TTP

It is TTP b/c it presents with the triad FARTN which can ultimately r/o all the other choices.

Page 29: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

Pt presents with ecchymosis, purpura and bleeding from the GI tract, lab values show decrease platelets, prolonged PT/PTT and bleeding time, and decrease in fibrinogen. What is the test done for this diagnosis? D-Dimer Peripheral blood smear BUN/CR Immunoglobulin None of the above

Page 30: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

D-Dimer

The diagnosis is DIC. With DIC there would be a decrease in platelets, prolonged PT/PTT and bleeding time, a decrease in fibrinogen, an increase in D-Dimer which can conclude the diagnosis.

Page 31: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

Which of the following would be affected by a deficiency in clotting factor 13 specifically? Convert prothrombin to thrombin Convert fibrin to fibrinogen Make cross-linked fibrin clots Activate factor 5 All of the above

Page 32: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

Make cross-linked fibrin clots

Factor 13 is associated with making clots. All the other choices are associated with deficiency in factor 10.

Page 33: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Matching!

Hemophilia A

Hemophilia B

Hemophilia C

Factor VIII Deficiency

Factor IX Deficiency

Factor XI Deficiency

Page 34: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

A 31 y/o asian male is brought to ER after falling of the stairs, who is A&Ox2, lethargic and states “I feel dizzy.” Pt’s left knee has a large ecchymosis over the anterior lateral aspect of the joint. A head CT is done and that shows a small intracerebral bleed in the left parietal area. Which of the following disorders is it most likely that his pt may have? ITP TTP Hemophilia A DIC Sickle Cell trait

Page 35: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

Hemophilia A

It is common in Asians and this is a bleeding disorder that can occur spontaneously or following an injury. Its also most common found in men because it is Y-linked.

Page 36: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

The most common histological subtype of lung cancer in smokers is?

Answer: Squamous cell lung carcinoma

Page 37: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

The most common histological subtype of lung cancer overall is?

Answer: Adenocarcinoma (40%)

Page 38: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

True or False?

Squamous cell carcinoma is strongly associated with cigarette smoking and has the worst prognosis among lung cancer?

Answer:

False!!!

Small cell carcinoma HAS the WORST prognosis

Page 39: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

What type of lung cancer is associated withSIADH?

Answer: Small Cell Carcinoma

Page 40: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

A major compressive complication of lung cancer, characterized by dyspnea, JVD, engorged neck and thoracic veins, and facial edema is:

Answer: Superior Vena Cava Syndrome

Page 41: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

What is the MOST COMMON clinical manifestation of the previous syndrome?

Answer: DYSPNEA

Page 42: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

True or False?

Clinicians use TNM system to assess the staging of lung cancers (SCLC and NSCLC)

Answer:

False!!!

SCLC’s staging is classified as Limited and Extended diseases

Page 43: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

Which type of thyroid malignancy has a bimodal distribution and characterized as having psammoma bodies and orphan annie cells?

Answer:

Papillary

The most common type of thyroid cancer. It arises from thyroxine and thyrogobulin producing follicular cells. It also has the best prognosis

Page 44: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

What are hot vs. cold nodules in diagnosing thyroid cancer and what is the one exception?

Answer: Hot nodules indicated that the cells are taking up

the nodules and functioning normally Cold Nodules mean the cells are not taking up radio

active iodine. This is indicative for a higher risk of malignancy.

Page 45: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

What is the Exception?

Follicular malignancy is the exception. Iodine uptake and concentration is present

Page 46: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

What will happen to Benign tumors with a TSH suppression test?

Answer:

Benign tumors use TSH to grow. Suppressing TSH will cause benign tumors to shrink

Page 47: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

What are the two major hemoglobin subtypes in

the red blood cell?

HbA(adult hemoglobin) contains a pair of alpha chains and a pair of beta chains

HbF (fetal hemoglobin) the predominant hemoglobin within the fetus from the 3rd through 9th month of gestation, has a higher affinity for O2 than HbA. HbF is replaced by HbA within 6 months of birth. That’s why diseases like B-Thalassemia major (HbF-HbA) and sickle cell disease (HbF-HbS)are evident after an infant is over 6 months old

Page 48: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

What is the storage form of iron in the body called?

Ferritin is the storage form of Fe within the body and it is measurable as an index of iron stores

Page 49: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

What are the values for diagnosing anemia in males and females?

Male – Hg<13.5 g/dL, Hct <41%

Female – Hg<12g/dL, Hct <36 %

Page 50: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

What is the preferred initial diagnostic test for Fe-deficiency anemia? What is the tx. of choice?

Answer:

Diagnostic test – serum ferritin (<30-35micrograms/L) (it will be lowered first in this anemia)

Ferrous sulfate, oral vs. parenteral Fe

Page 51: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

Which anemia is common in Asians and African Americans? Which is common in Mediterranean (Italy and Greece) and African American Populations?

Page 52: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

Asians and African Americans – alpha thalassemia

Mediterranean and African American populations – beta thalassemia

Page 53: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

What are some presentations of B-thalassemia major?

Facial abnormalities/bone distortion; tower skull, frontal bossing, maxillary hypertrophy (due to bone marrow expansion) – “chipmunk face”

Jaundice – due to hemolysis of RBCs

Iron overload due to numerous blood transfusions and the body’s inability to remove excessive Fe. Fe is consequently deposited in the myocardium, liver, endocrine organs ( pituitary, thyroid, adrenals and pancreas) leading to organ damage and resulting in death

Growth failure

Coagulation abnormalities

Page 54: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

In sickle cell anemia, aplastic crisis (suppression of erythropoiesis by marrow due to infection) is most commonly caused by?

Answer:

Parvovirus B19 or folic acid deficiency

Page 55: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

What is the most common cause of aplastic anemia?

Answer:

Idiopathic – autoimmune T cell-mediated

Page 56: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

Decreased production of intrinsic factor is associated with what type of anemia?

Answer:

Pernicious anemia: autoimmune metaplastic atrophic gastritis – hypochlorhydria and decreased

production of intrinsic factor

Page 57: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

What type of anemia is caused by an inadequate dietary intake of green, leafy vegetables or alcoholism?

Answer:

Folate Deficiency Anemia

Page 58: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

Hypotension, increased jugular venous distention, muffled heart sounds are part of what triad?

Page 59: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

Beck’s Triad

Commonly seen in what oncologic emergency?

Pericardial Tamponade

Page 60: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

What is the initial symptom of spinal cord compression?

Answer:

Pain that is not relieved with rest and increased at night

Page 61: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Which oncologic emergency has a “winking

owl” sign on X-ray?

Spinal Cord Compression

Page 62: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Question?

Hyperuricemia, hyperkalemia, hyperphosphatemia, hypocalcemia, increased LDH (because RBC are being destroyed) are indicative of what syndrome?

Page 63: Hematology/Oncology Brought to You By: Group 7

Answer:

Tumor Lysis Syndrome