| Literature DB >> 29945542 |
Ru Li1, Hengrui Liu1, James P Dilger1, Jun Lin2.
Abstract
Breast cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in women. Surgery is the first line of treatment for breast cancer. Retrospective clinical studies suggest that the type of anesthesia administered during oncological surgery may influence patient outcome. Propofol, the widely used intravenous anesthetic agent, may lead to better outcomes compared to volatile anesthetics. Here we review the literature on the effect of propofol in breast cancer cells, the immune system, pain management, and patient outcomes. Evidence from the study of breast cancer cell lines suggests that high concentrations of propofol have both anti-tumor and pro-tumor effects. Propofol and volatile anesthetics have different effects on the immune system. Propofol has also been shown to reduce the development and severity of acute and chronic pain following surgery. Although a retrospective study that included many types of cancer indicated that propofol increases the long-term survival of patients following surgery, the evidence for this in breast cancer is weak. It has been shown that Propofol combined with paravertebral block led to change of serum composition that affects the breast cancer cell behaviors and natural killer cell activity. Prospective studies are in progress and will be finished within 5 years. The existing evidence is not sufficient to warrant changes to current anesthetic management. Further research is needed to clarify the mechanisms by which propofol affects cancer cells and the immune system.Entities:
Keywords: Breast Cancer; Migration; Natural killer cell; Proliferation; Propofol
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29945542 PMCID: PMC6020422 DOI: 10.1186/s12871-018-0543-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Anesthesiol ISSN: 1471-2253 Impact factor: 2.217
Fig. 1Proposed mechanisms for the anti-tumor effects of propofol. Propofol impairs cell proliferation through inhibition of NF-kB pathway. It also reduces cell migration and invasion by inhibiting NET1, and decreasing the secretion of MMP2/MMP9
Summary of the studies that examined direct effects of propofol on breast cancer cells
| Study | Cell line | [Propofol] (μg/ml) | Incubation time (hr) | Proliferation (method) | Migration (method) | Invasion (method) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Li et al | MDA-MB-231 | 2–10 | 24 | ↓ (wound healing) | ↓ (Matrigel membrane) | |
| Ecimovic et al | MDA-MB-231 | 6–10 | 24 | No change (MTT) | ↓ (8 μm pores) | No change (Matrigel membrane, 6 h) |
| Ecimovic et al | MCF7 | 4–10 | 24 | No change (MTT) | ↓ (8 μm pores) | ↓ (Matrigel membrane, 6 h) |
| Yu et al | a MDA-MB-435 | 2 (10 μM) | 6 | ↓ (TUNEL stain) | ||
| Siddiqui et al | MDA-MB-231 | 20 (100 μM) | 24 | ↓ (WST-1) | No change (8 μm pores, 4 h, 5 μg/ml) | |
| Garib et al | MDA-MB-468 | 3–9 | 10 | ↑ (collagen matrix, video tracking) | ||
| Meng et al | MDA-MB-231 | 2–10 | 12–24 | ↑ (MTT, 10 h) | ↑ (wound healing) |
Note that propofol concentration and/or incubation time in a study may be different for different assays. This is noted in the Migration and Invasion columns
aMDA-MB-435 is a cell line originated from a metastatic breast cancer but its identity could be melanoma instead
Fig. 2Proposed mechanisms for the pro-tumor effects of propofol. Propofol enhances migration of breast cancer cells by increasing intracellular Ca2+ level and rearrangement of F-action. Propofol also promotes cell proliferation through Nrf2 pathway, and inhibits apoptosis by decreasing the expression of p53 and caspase-3
Clinical trials comparing volatile anesthetics with propofol in breast cancer surgery
| Type of Study | Reference | Cancer | Surgery Type | Anesthetic Technique | Number of Patients | Outcome (95% CI) | Estimated Completion Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Retrospective | Enlund et al. | Breast Cancer | Breast cancer surgery | GA with propofol or sevoflurane | 1873 (620 in propofol and 1217 in sevoflurane) | 3% higher for overall survival at one year in propofol group (p < 0.001) | Finished |
| Retrospective | Lee et al | Breast Cancer | Modified radical mastectomy | Propofol-based TIVA or sevoflurane-based anesthesia | 325 (173 in TIVA and 152 in sevoflurane) | Propofol group showed a lower rate of cancer recurrence ( | Finished |
| Retrospective | Kim et al | Breast Cancer | Breast Cancer surgery | Propofol-based TIVA or sevoflurane-based anesthesia | 2645 (56 in TIVA and 2589 in volatile--base anesthesia) | No difference | Finished |
| Prospective | University of Zurich | Breast Cancer | Breast Cancer surgery | GA with propofol TCI or sevoflurane | 231 | Circulating tumor cells at 3 days after surgery | August, 2017 |
| Prospective | Konkuk University Medical Center | Breast Cancer | Breast Cancer surgery | GA with propofol or sevoflurane | 300 | NK cell activity at 1 and 24 h after surgery | July, 2020 |
| Prospective | Uppsala University | Breast, colonic and rectal cancer | Breast Cancer surgery | GA with propofol or sevoflurane | 2000 | Overall 5-year survival | December, 2022 |
GA general anesthesia, TIVA total intravenous anesthesia, TCI target-controlled infusion, NK cell natural killer cell