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Department of OUTCOMES RESEARCH Regional Analgesia & Cancer Recurrence Daniel I. Sessler, M.D. Michael Cudahy Professor and Chair Department of OUTCOMES RESEARCH The Cleveland Clinic No personal financial interests related to this presentation Providing the evidence for evidence-based medicine© Objectives Mechanistic evidence for regional analgesia and cancer recurrence Animal evidence that regional analgesia ameliorates tumor progression Human evidence regarding regional analgesia and cancer recurrence Causes of Long-term Mortality ≈10% one-year mortality in patients ≥65 yrs Cause of Death Monk, A&A 2005 % Cancer 52% Cardiovascular 17% Renal/Liver Failure 5% Respiratory Failure 4% Pulmonary Emboli 2% Sepsis/Infection 2% Cancer Surgery Cancer recurrence is usually lethal Surgery remains primary treatment • Releases tumor cells into blood stream • There is always minimal residual disease Natural killer (NK) cells are major defense • Spontaneously recognize and kill tumor cells Surgery and anesthesia impair NK Cell function • Neuroendocrine stress response to surgery • Volatile anesthetics • Opioids Regional Analgesia Protective? Regional anesthesia & analgesia • Reduces stress response to surgery • Reduces or eliminates general anesthetics • Obviates need for postoperative opioids All three help preserve NK cell function Hypothesis: • Regional anesthesia & analgesia reduces risk of cancer recurrence Natural Kill Activity Surgery in Rats Reduced NK Activity • In blood • In the spleen Increased lung metastases Ben-Eliyahu, Int J Cancer 1999 Anesth Increases Tumor Retention Melamed, A&A 2003 Moudgil, CJA 1997 Opioids are Immunosuppressant Lung tumor retention Central pathway • Glucocorticoid release Peripheral pathways • Reduced NK cell activity • Impaired antibody production • Decreased cytokine release Shavit, Neuroimmunomodulation 2004 Rats: Bar-Yusof, Anesthesiology 2001 Paravertebrals & Breast Cancer Retrospective analysis of 129 mastectomies for CA • 50 had combined general & paravertebral analgesia • 79 had general and morphine analgesia % Recurrence-free 100 Paravertebral | | | 90 | | | | | | 80 General | | | | 70 P = 0.012 0 0 12 24 Time (mo) 36 Exadaktylos, Anesthesiology 2006 Epidurals & Prostate Cancer Retrospective analysis of 225 prostatectomies for CA • 102 had combined general & epidural analgesia • 123 had general and morphine analgesia % Recurrence-free 100 Epidural/ General | | || ||| ||| | | || 90 || | | | |||| ||| || | | 80 | ||| | | |||| | | 70 | ||||| | || | || | | ||||| |||| ||||| || | | || | | ||| || |||| | ||| || General/ Morphine 60 Epidurals associated with 57% [17-78%] less recurrence | | ||| || ||| | | | ||| ||| || |||| 50 | | | | | | P < 0.0001 0 0 2 4 6 Time (yr) 8 10 Biki, Anesthesiology 2008 Epidurals & Prostate Cancer Scavonetto, BJA, in press Spinals & Melanoma Retrospective analysis of patients for melanoma surgery • 52 well-matched pairs Spinal P = 0.09 General Gottschalk, BJA 2012 Negative Retrospective Results Ismail et al: BJA 2010 • Brachytherapy for cervical cancer – 63 neuraxial vs. 69 general anesthesia Gottschalk et al: Anesthesiology 2010 • Colectomy for colon cancer – 256 epidural vs. 253 general anesthesia Tsui et al: CJA 2010 • Epidural analgesia for prostate cancer – 49 epidural vs. 50 general anesthesia Forget et al: EJA 2011 • Epidural analgesia for prostate cancer – 578 epidural vs. 533 general anesthesia Day et al: BJA 2012 • Laparoscopic colectomy • 107 epidural; 144 spinal; and 173 general alone Etc. MASTER Trial Follow-up Myles, BMJ, 2011 Epidural (n=230) Also negative: Tsui 2010 Christopherson 2008 General (n=215) Binczak, et al 2013 (n=132) Summary Three compelling mechanisms protect NK function • Reduced surgical stress response • Decreased need for volatile anesthetics • Decreased Opioid use Results in rodents are convincing Human results equivocol • Retrospective studies mostly negative • Only randomized trials negative –But all small and designed for other purposes Randomized trials needed — and in progress Department of OUTCOMES RESEARCH