Definitions & Tumor Components - Naming Game Intro
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Neoplasia: "New growth"; abnormal mass of tissue, growth exceeds & is uncoordinated with normal tissues, persisting after cessation of stimuli.
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Tumor: Originally swelling; now largely synonymous with neoplasm.
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Oncology: Study of tumors (Greek oncos = tumor).
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Tumor Components:
- Parenchyma: Transformed neoplastic cells. Determines tumor's biological behavior & is the basis of classification/naming.
- Stroma: Supporting, non-neoplastic host-derived framework (connective tissue, blood vessels, inflammatory cells). Essential for tumor growth & support.
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Basic Classification (Benign vs. Malignant):
- Benign: Generally localized, slow-growing, well-differentiated; rarely fatal.
- Malignant (Cancer): Invasive, destructive, capable of metastasis; often fatal.
⭐ Hamartoma: A benign, disorganized mass of mature cells/tissues indigenous to the specific site (e.g., lung hamartoma with cartilage, bronchi). Considered a developmental malformation, not a true neoplasm.
Benign Tumor Nomenclature - Gentle "-oma" Endings
- General: Suffix "-oma" to cell of origin = usually benign.
- ⚠️ Exceptions: melanoma, lymphoma, seminoma, hepatoma (all malignant).
- Epithelial Benign Tumors:
- Adenoma: Glandular origin/pattern.
- E.g., thyroid, colonic adenoma; fibroadenoma (breast).
- Papilloma: Epithelial, finger-like projections.
- E.g., squamous cell papilloma, intraductal papilloma.
- Cystadenoma: Adenoma + cysts.
- E.g., ovarian serous/mucinous cystadenoma.
- Adenoma: Glandular origin/pattern.
- Mesenchymal Benign Tumors:
- Cell of origin + "-oma".
- Fibroma (fibrous tissue)
- Lipoma (adipose tissue)
- Chondroma (cartilage)
- Osteoma (bone)
- Leiomyoma (smooth muscle) 📌 "L" for Leiomyo & Ladies (uterus).
- Rhabdomyoma (striated muscle)
- Hemangioma (blood vessels)
- Lymphangioma (lymph vessels)
- Cell of origin + "-oma".
⭐ Leiomyoma (fibroid) is the most common benign tumor in women, typically in the uterus.
Malignant Tumor Nomenclature - Cancer's Code Names
- General Suffixes:
- -carcinoma: Malignant tumor of epithelial origin (e.g., adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma).
- -sarcoma: Malignant tumor of mesenchymal/connective tissue origin (e.g., fibrosarcoma, osteosarcoma, liposarcoma).
- Hematologic & Lymphoid Malignancies:
- Leukemia: Malignancy of hematopoietic cells in blood/bone marrow.
- Lymphoma: Solid tumor of lymphoid cells (e.g., Hodgkin, Non-Hodgkin).
- Multiple Myeloma: Malignancy of plasma cells.
- Key Exceptions & Unique Names (Malignant):
- Melanoma (melanocytes)
- Seminoma (testicular germ cells)
- Hepatoma (term for hepatocellular carcinoma)
- Mesothelioma (mesothelium)
- Lymphoma (as above)
- Leukemia (as above)
- 📌 Mnemonic: "My Lovely Hot Sister Makes Lasagna" (Melanoma, Lymphoma, Hepatoma, Seminoma, Mesothelioma, Leukemia).
- Blastomas: Malignant tumors of embryonal/primitive undifferentiated cells (e.g., neuroblastoma, retinoblastoma, nephroblastoma). Common in children.
⭐ Carcinomas generally metastasize via lymphatics first; sarcomas typically spread hematogenously.
Special Tumor Categories - The Unique Crew
- Mixed Tumors: Show divergent differentiation, often biphasic (epithelial & mesenchymal components).
- Example: Pleomorphic adenoma (salivary gland) - epithelial cells and myxoid stroma with chondroid/osseous metaplasia.
- Teratomas: Derived from ≥2 (often 3) germ cell layers; totipotent cells.
- Originate from gonads (ovary, testis) or midline embryonic rests.
- Types: Mature (benign, e.g., dermoid cyst), Immature (malignant), Monodermal (specialized, e.g., struma ovarii).
⭐ Mature cystic teratomas of the ovary are common and often contain hair, teeth, and sebaceous material.
- Hamartoma: Disorganized but mature, benign mass of cells indigenous to the involved site.
- Example: Pulmonary chondroid hamartoma (cartilage, bronchioles).
- Choristoma (Heterotopia): Congenital anomaly; microscopically normal tissue in an abnormal location.
- Example: Pancreatic tissue in stomach wall.

📌 Mnemonic for germ layers in teratoma: Every Monster Eats (Ectoderm, Mesoderm, Endoderm).
High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Benign tumors usually end in "-oma" (e.g., Fibroma), but melanoma, lymphoma, seminoma, hepatoma are malignant exceptions.
- Carcinomas are malignant epithelial tumors; adenocarcinomas arise from glandular epithelium.
- Sarcomas are malignant mesenchymal tumors (e.g., Liposarcoma).
- Teratomas derive from totipotent cells (all three germ layers); can be benign or malignant.
- Hamartoma: disorganized mature native tissue; Choristoma: ectopic architecturally normal tissue.
- Anaplasia and pleomorphism are hallmarks of malignancy.
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