Thursday, August 1, 2013

Reduction of Breast Cancer Relapses with Perioperative Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs: New Findings and a Review

Reduction of Breast Cancer Relapses with Perioperative Non-Steroidal 
Anti-Inflammatory Drugs: New Findings and a Review 

Michael Retsky, Romano Demicheli, William JM Hrushesky, Patrice Forget, Marc De Kock, Isaac Gukas, Rick A Rogers, Michael Baum, Vikas Sukhatme and Jayant S Vaidya

Abstract: To explain a bimodal pattern of hazard of relapse among early stage breast cancer patients identified in multiple databases, we proposed that late relapses result from steady stochastic progressions from single dormant malignant cells to avascular micrometastases and then on to growing deposits. However in order to explain early relapses, we had to postulate that something happens at about the time of surgery to provoke sudden exits from dormant phases to active growth
and then to detection. Most relapses in breast cancer are in the early category. Recent data from Forget et al. suggests an unexpected mechanism. They retrospectively studied results from 327 consecutive breast cancer patients comparing various perioperative analgesics and anesthetics in one Belgian hospital and one surgeon. Patients were treated with mastectomy and conventional adjuvant therapy. Relapse hazard updated Sept 2011 are presented. A common Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drug (NSAID) analgesic used in surgery produced far superior disease-free survival in the first 5 years
after surgery. The expected prominent early relapse events in months 9-18 are reduced 5-fold. If this observation holds up to further scrutiny, it could mean that the simple use of this safe, inexpensive and effective anti-inflammatory agent at surgery might eliminate early relapses. Transient systemic inflammation accompanying surgery could facilitate angiogenesis of dormant micrometastases, proliferation of dormant single cells, and seeding of circulating cancer stem cells (perhaps in part released from bone marrow) resulting in early relapse and could have been effectively blocked by the perioperative anti-inflammatory agent.

While this paper is not currently available on a server, the author is happy to provide them to interested parties.  If interested, contact Michael Retsky at:
michael.retsky@gmail.com


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