Chamaraux-Tran Thiên-Nga, Piegeler Tobias
Département d'Anesthésie et Réanimation Chirurgicale, Hôpital Hautepierre, CHU Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France.
Institut de Génétique et de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire, Unité Mixte de Recherche 7104, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, U964 Institut National de Santé et de Recherche Médicale, Université de Strasbourg, Illkirch, France.
Front Med (Lausanne). 2017 Dec 20;4:235. doi: 10.3389/fmed.2017.00235. eCollection 2017.
Surgical removal of the primary tumor in solid cancer is an essential component of the treatment. However, the perioperative period can paradoxically lead to an increased risk of cancer recurrence. A bimodal dynamics for early-stage breast cancer recurrence suggests a tumor dormancy-based model with a mastectomy-driven acceleration of the metastatic process and a crucial role of the immunosuppressive state during the perioperative period. Recent evidence suggests that anesthesia could also influence the progress of the disease. Local anesthetics (LAs) have long been used for their properties to block nociceptive input. They also exert anti-inflammatory capacities by modulating the liberation or signal propagation of inflammatory mediators. Interestingly, LAs can reduce viability and proliferation of many cancer cells as well. Additionally, retrospective clinical trials have suggested that regional anesthesia for cancer surgery (either with or without general anesthesia) might reduce the risk of recurrence. Lidocaine, a LA, which can be administered intravenously, is widely used in clinical practice for multimodal analgesia. It is associated with a morphine-sparing effect, reduced pain scores, and in major surgery probably also with a reduced incidence of postoperative ileus and length of hospital stay. Systemic delivery might therefore be efficient to target residual disease or reach cells able to form micrometastasis. Moreover, an study has shown that lidocaine could enhance the activity of natural killer (NK) cells. Due to their ability to recognize and kill tumor cells without the requirement of prior antigen exposure, NKs are the main actor of the innate immune system. However, several perioperative factors can reduce NK activity, such as stress, pain, opioids, or general anesthetics. Intravenous lidocaine as part of the perioperative anesthesia regimen would be of major interest for clinicians, as it might bear the potential to reduce the risk of cancer recurrence or progression patients undergoing cancer surgery. As a well-known pharmaceutical agent, lidocaine might therefore be a promising candidate for oncological drug repurposing. We urgently need clinical randomized trials assessing the protective effect of lidocaine on NKs function and against recurrence after cancer surgery to achieve a "proof of concept."
实体癌的原发肿瘤手术切除是治疗的重要组成部分。然而,围手术期反而可能导致癌症复发风险增加。早期乳腺癌复发的双峰动力学表明,存在一种基于肿瘤休眠的模型,其中乳房切除术会加速转移过程,且围手术期免疫抑制状态起关键作用。最近的证据表明,麻醉也可能影响疾病进展。局部麻醉药(LAs)长期以来因其阻断伤害性输入的特性而被使用。它们还通过调节炎症介质的释放或信号传播发挥抗炎能力。有趣的是,局部麻醉药也能降低许多癌细胞的活力和增殖。此外,回顾性临床试验表明,癌症手术的区域麻醉(无论是否联合全身麻醉)可能会降低复发风险。利多卡因是一种可静脉注射的局部麻醉药,在临床实践中广泛用于多模式镇痛。它具有节省吗啡的作用,可降低疼痛评分,在大手术中可能还会降低术后肠梗阻的发生率和缩短住院时间。因此,全身给药可能有效地针对残留疾病或到达能够形成微转移的细胞。此外,一项研究表明利多卡因可增强自然杀伤(NK)细胞的活性。由于NK细胞能够在无需预先接触抗原的情况下识别并杀死肿瘤细胞,它们是先天免疫系统的主要作用者。然而,一些围手术期因素会降低NK活性,如应激、疼痛、阿片类药物或全身麻醉药。作为围手术期麻醉方案一部分的静脉注射利多卡因,对临床医生来说可能非常重要,因为它可能有降低癌症手术患者癌症复发或进展风险的潜力。作为一种知名的药剂,利多卡因因此可能是肿瘤药物重新利用的一个有前景的候选药物。我们迫切需要进行临床随机试验,评估利多卡因对NK细胞功能的保护作用以及对癌症手术后复发的预防作用,以实现“概念验证”。