"This is the moment it becomes malignant. Carcinoma in situ becomes invasive adenocarcinoma. The cells learn to secrete matrix metalloproteinases—molecular scissors. They cut through the collagen. They reach the submucosa. And inside the submucosa are lymphatics and blood vessels.
"At this point, Margaret felt nothing. The polyp was a tiny mushroom growing in the dark. But on a colonoscopy, it would have looked like a raised red bump. If we had caught it then, we would have snip-snipped it out. Case closed. We didn't." Part 2: The Invasion (Breaking the Basement Membrane) An animation shows cells piling up, pushing through a thin blue line (the basement membrane). pathology lecture
Now, Margaret’s tumor has a new skill: angiogenesis. It secretes VEGF, recruiting new blood vessels to feed its growth. The tumor doubles in size. It grows through the muscularis propria—the colon’s own muscle wall. "This is the moment it becomes malignant
Dr. Voss nods slowly. "She knew. She asked me once, over the phone, 'Is it the bad kind?' I told her the truth. She thanked me and said, 'Then I’ll make the most of the time left.'" They cut through the collagen
"Good morning. Put down your coffee. This is not a collection of facts. This is a story. The story of a woman named Margaret."
"Margaret’s primary tumor was 7 cm. It had invaded the omentum—that fatty apron of the abdomen. That’s what she felt as a lump. The omentum tried to wall it off, but the tumor just grew inside it like ivy on a fence." Part 4: The Diagnosis (The Biopsy) The slide changes to a histology image: disorganized glands, dark purple nuclei, mitotic figures.
"Margaret chose palliative chemo. She had eight good months. Then the liver metastases grew. She developed ascites—fluid in the belly from portal hypertension. Then jaundice—the liver couldn’t clear bilirubin. Then confusion—ammonia from the gut bypassing the failed liver.