Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer You are a doctor interviewing a person...

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Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology

Transcript of Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer You are a doctor interviewing a person...

Page 1: Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer  You are a doctor interviewing a person (the piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

Understanding Cancer

Accelerated Biology

Page 2: Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer  You are a doctor interviewing a person (the piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

Faces of CancerYou are a doctor interviewing a person (the

piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

You will identify and add to the board: If there is a family history Period of life diagnoses with cancer Type of Cancer Risk Factors

From this, we will try to construct an understanding of how cancer affects people.

Page 3: Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer  You are a doctor interviewing a person (the piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

What conclusions can you draw from the data?What affect might family history have on the likeliness of

getting cancer?

What affect might age have on the likelihood of getting cancer? In general? Certain type?

What affect might risk factors might have on the likeliness of getting cancer?

Cancer is a multifactorial disease. What do you think that means?

Page 4: Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer  You are a doctor interviewing a person (the piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

Reviewing our diagnosis notes?

Routine screening vs. imaging vs. genetic testing vs. biopsy

Which of the above is can actually diagnose cancer?

Page 5: Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer  You are a doctor interviewing a person (the piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

Cause

Hereditary vs. Carcinogen vs. Chance

Genes change the way cells behave!

Oncogenes Accelerated Cell Cycle

Cyclin Growth Signal

Tumor Suppressor Genes p53

Apoptosis: programmed cell death

Page 6: Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer  You are a doctor interviewing a person (the piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

Spread and the name of cancer

Metastasis

Need for oxygen: Hypoxia stimulates

angiogenesis

Why might a tumor cell need oxygen?

If a tumor didn’t get oxygen what would happen?

Page 7: Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer  You are a doctor interviewing a person (the piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

Spread and immortalityTelomerase:

Chromosomes shorten every replication.

This makes cells “mortal”

During times when cells need to divide many times, an enzyme called telomerase repairs telomeres.

Telomerase can be reactivated in cancer.

Page 8: Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer  You are a doctor interviewing a person (the piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

Treatment3 types of treatments:

One patient may have one or even all three treatments:SurgeryChemotherapy Radiation

Page 9: Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer  You are a doctor interviewing a person (the piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

Isn’t radiation a mutagen?

High levels of radiation: destroys cells

Low levels of radiation: mutates DNA

Page 10: Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer  You are a doctor interviewing a person (the piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

Does chemotherapy make you sick?

Depends: Some chemotherapies non-specifically kill fast

dividing cells. Where else in your body do you have fast

dividing cells? What precautions do people on chemo take?

Other chemotherapies are targeted: Targeted at angiogenesis Targeted directly at specific cancer cells Targeted at boosting the immune system.

Page 11: Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer  You are a doctor interviewing a person (the piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

How are stem cells used to treat leukemia?Bone marrow transplant

Donor bone marrow Autologous bone marrow transplant

Page 12: Understanding Cancer Accelerated Biology. Faces of Cancer  You are a doctor interviewing a person (the piece of paper you got on the way in) with cancer.

Doctor and patient jigsaw

Make up your own case study: Identify what tests have been done to diagnose

the patient. Provide results. Explain what may have gone wrong with the cells

and identify if your patient has signs of metastasis.

Switch partners with another group; you will be the patient and someone from the other group will be the doctor. You will share your story and the doctor will suggest a treatment based on the symptoms you have described.