Journal article
Surgical stress response and promotion of metastasis in colorectal cancer: a complex and heterogeneous process
C Behrenbruch, C Shembrey, S Paquet-Fifield, C Mølck, HJ Cho, M Michael, BNJ Thomson, AG Heriot, F Hollande
Clinical and Experimental Metastasis | SPRINGER | Published : 2018
Abstract
Surgery remains the curative treatment modality for colorectal cancer in all stages, including stage IV with resectable liver metastasis. There is emerging evidence that the stress response caused by surgery as well as other perioperative therapies such as anesthesia and analgesia may promote growth of pre-existing micro-metastasis or potentially initiate tumor dissemination. Therapeutically targeting the perioperative period may therefore reduce the effect that surgical treatments have in promoting metastases, for example by combining β-adrenergic receptor antagonists and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitors in the perioperative setting. In this paper, we highlight some of the mechanisms tha..
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Funding Acknowledgements
The authors thank Dr. Erica Sloan for supplying the pharmacological compounds and acknowledge the financial support of CSSANZ and Covidien. They also wish to thank the University of Melbourne BOMP facility for their support with imaging experiments.