Abstract
The question of whether anesthetic, analgesic or other perioperative intervention during cancer resection surgery might influence long-term oncologic outcomes has generated much attention over the past 13 years. A wealth of experimental and observational clinical data have been published, but the results of prospective, randomized clinical trials are awaited. The European Union supports a pan-European network of researchers, clinicians and industry partners engaged in this question (COST Action 15204: Euro-Periscope). In this narrative review, members of the Euro-Periscope network briefly summarize the current state of evidence pertaining to the potential effects of the most commonly deployed anesthetic and analgesic techniques and other non-surgical interventions during cancer resection surgery on tumor recurrence or metastasis.
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Forget, P., Aguirre, J. A., Bencic, I., Borgeat, A., Cama, A., Condron, C., … Buggy, D. (2019, May 1). How anesthetic, analgesic and other non-surgical techniques during cancer surgery might affect postoperative oncologic outcomes: A summary of current state of evidence. Cancers. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers11050592
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