Article Type
Changed
Fri, 01/04/2019 - 11:10
Display Headline
Is choice of anesthesia during cancer surgery linked to outcome?
The anesthesia and analgesic technique used during cancer surgery is rarely on patients’ radar, but an emerging body of evidence suggests it may affect their chances of recurrence and metastasis. “There’s enough data to raise a concern, absolutely,” said Dr Hugh Hemmings, chair of anesthesiology at Cornell University, New York, and co-editor of a recent British Journal of Anaesthesia (BJA) special issue on anesthesia and cancer.1 Laboratory studies in the 1980s and 1990s that suggested a link between anesthesia and cancer outcomes went largely unnoticed until a 2006 retrospective cohort study showed a 40% reduction in recurrence during 2.5-4 years of follow-up in women who were given paravertebral anesthesia, a type of regional anesthesia, with general anesthesia rather than general anesthesia and postoperative morphine analgesia during primary breast cancer surgery.2

 

Click on the PDF icon at the top of this introduction to read the full article.

 

Article PDF
Issue
The Journal of Community and Supportive Oncology - 12(11)
Publications
Topics
Page Number
418-420
Legacy Keywords
anesthesia, analgesia, cancer surgery, opioids
Sections
Article PDF
Article PDF
The anesthesia and analgesic technique used during cancer surgery is rarely on patients’ radar, but an emerging body of evidence suggests it may affect their chances of recurrence and metastasis. “There’s enough data to raise a concern, absolutely,” said Dr Hugh Hemmings, chair of anesthesiology at Cornell University, New York, and co-editor of a recent British Journal of Anaesthesia (BJA) special issue on anesthesia and cancer.1 Laboratory studies in the 1980s and 1990s that suggested a link between anesthesia and cancer outcomes went largely unnoticed until a 2006 retrospective cohort study showed a 40% reduction in recurrence during 2.5-4 years of follow-up in women who were given paravertebral anesthesia, a type of regional anesthesia, with general anesthesia rather than general anesthesia and postoperative morphine analgesia during primary breast cancer surgery.2

 

Click on the PDF icon at the top of this introduction to read the full article.

 

The anesthesia and analgesic technique used during cancer surgery is rarely on patients’ radar, but an emerging body of evidence suggests it may affect their chances of recurrence and metastasis. “There’s enough data to raise a concern, absolutely,” said Dr Hugh Hemmings, chair of anesthesiology at Cornell University, New York, and co-editor of a recent British Journal of Anaesthesia (BJA) special issue on anesthesia and cancer.1 Laboratory studies in the 1980s and 1990s that suggested a link between anesthesia and cancer outcomes went largely unnoticed until a 2006 retrospective cohort study showed a 40% reduction in recurrence during 2.5-4 years of follow-up in women who were given paravertebral anesthesia, a type of regional anesthesia, with general anesthesia rather than general anesthesia and postoperative morphine analgesia during primary breast cancer surgery.2

 

Click on the PDF icon at the top of this introduction to read the full article.

 

Issue
The Journal of Community and Supportive Oncology - 12(11)
Issue
The Journal of Community and Supportive Oncology - 12(11)
Page Number
418-420
Page Number
418-420
Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
Is choice of anesthesia during cancer surgery linked to outcome?
Display Headline
Is choice of anesthesia during cancer surgery linked to outcome?
Legacy Keywords
anesthesia, analgesia, cancer surgery, opioids
Legacy Keywords
anesthesia, analgesia, cancer surgery, opioids
Sections
Citation Override
JCSO 2014;12:418-420
Disallow All Ads
Alternative CME
Article PDF Media