Alexandros G .Sfakianakis,ENT,Anapafeos 5 Agios Nikolaos Crete 72100 Greece,00302841026182

Πέμπτη 30 Νοεμβρίου 2017

Radical gastric cancer surgery results in widespread upregulation of pro-tumourigenic intraperitoneal cytokines

Background

Radical surgical resection is the mainstay of curative treatment for oesophagogastric malignancy. However, survival and recurrence rates remain poor. Theoretical data suggests that the inflammatory response to surgery can promote tumour recurrence. The local and systemic inflammatory response to radical oesophagogastric cancer surgery has not been fully characterized. We aimed to measure this response, particularly factors associated with tumour implantation.

Methods

Consecutive patients undergoing radical junctional or gastric cancer resection over 12 months were recruited. Repeated serum and adipose tissue were collected intra-operatively. Adipose tissue was collected adjacent and remote to the tumour, and cytokine messenger RNA (mRNA) expression was measured. Post-operatively, daily serum was collected for 7 days, and analysed for inflammatory cell profile and cytokine concentration.

Results

There were nine patients recruited (67.1 ± 2.1 years). mRNA expression of interleukin-6 (IL-6), CC-chemokine ligand-2 and IL-1β increased in adipose tissue intra-operatively (P < 0.05), equally both adjacent and remote from the tumour site. Serum IL-6 concentration increased from 23.3 pg/mL to 161.8 pg/mL intra-operatively (P < 0.05) before falling steadily to 35.7 pg/mL post-operatively (P < 0.05). Serum tumour necrosis factor-α was elevated throughout, and IL-1β levels were unaffected. Leukocyte and neutrophil populations increased, while T-cell and dendritic cell populations decreased intra-operatively (P < 0.05).

Conclusion

Radical surgery dramatically upregulates the expression of pro-tumourigenic cytokines in the peritoneum. There is also a marked systemic immune and inflammatory response to surgery, including downregulation of T-cell and dendritic cell populations. This offers two potential pathways that may facilitate tumour progression – local inflammation promoting peritoneal adherence and implantation, and secondary suppression of immunosurveillance due to circulating inflammatory response.



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