Official Title

Effects of Different Types of Perioperative Analgesia on Minimal Residual Disease Development After Colon Cancer Surgery
  • Phase

    Phase 4
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Study Participants

    60
The aim of this study is to compare the effects of three types of perioperative analgesia on the number of circulating cancer cells (representing minimal residual disease) following radical colon cancer surgery. Patients will be randomized into one of three groups. The intervention group will receive combined regional and general anesthesia during surgery and postoperative epidural analgesia. The two control groups will receive balanced general anesthesia and either morphine-based or piritramide-based postoperative analgesia. We hypothesize that epidural analgesia will be favorable to both piritramide-based and morphine-based analgesia and that piritramide-based analgesia will be favorable to morphine-based analgesia with regard to the number of circulating cancer cells and its development in the early postoperative period.
Techniques of regional analgesia such as epidural analgesia may favorably influence metastasis development following cancer surgery compared to analgesia based on strong opioids such as morphine or piritramide. These beneficial effects, if present, are probably attributable to less immunosuppression of antimetastatic immune defenses.

The aim of this study is to identify techniques of perioperative analgesia with the potential to prevent metastasis development in patients undergoing open radical colon cancer surgery. In the early postoperative period, a relationship between metastasis development and the number of circulating cancer cells representing minimal residual disease has been shown. Therefore, effects of epidural, morphine-based and piritramide-based analgesia on the number of circulating cancer cells will be compared at several time points during the peroperative and early postoperative periods. The number of circulating cancer cells will be assessed in peripheral venous blood samples using real-time polymerase chain reaction. Perioperative care will be standardized and patients will be followed by clinical observation, laboratory analyses and monitoring instrumentation daily during their hospital stay.
Study Started
Jan 31
2015
Primary Completion
Mar 31
2019
Study Completion
Mar 31
2019
Last Update
Mar 13
2019

Other Epidural analgesia

see Arm/group description

  • Other names: Perioperative epidural analgesia

Drug Piritramide

see Arm/group description

  • Other names: Postoperative piritramide analgesia

Drug Morphine

see Arm/group description

  • Other names: Postoperative morphine analgesia

Epidural Active Comparator

Patients will receive perioperative epidural analgesia. Drugs: bupivacaine 1.25 mg/ml and sufentanil 0.5 mcg/ml Form and frequency: continuous infusion Dosage: 4 - 14 ml/h with boluses 2 - 4 ml based on pain assessment Duration: as long as required

Piritramide Active Comparator

Patients will receive postoperative analgesia with piritramide. Drugs: piritramide 1.0 mg/ml Form and frequency: continuous infusion Dosage: 0 - 4 ml/h with boluses 2 - 4 ml based on pain assessment Duration: as long as required

Morphine Active Comparator

Patients will receive postoperative analgesia with morphine. Drugs: morphine 1.0 mg/ml Form and frequency: continuous infusion Dosage: 0 - 4 ml/h with boluses 2 - 4 ml based on pain assessment Duration: as long as required

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Patients undergoing open radical surgery for colon cancer (without known extension beyond colon)
Age over 18 years
Written informed consent

Exclusion Criteria:

Allergy or intolerance of morphine, piritramide, marcaine, sufentanil or volatile anesthetics
History of colon cancer resection
Other cancer present (apart from those in complete long-term remission for minimum 6 months)
Chronic opioid medication and/or opioid administration 7 days or less prior to surgery
Any contraindication to thoracic epidural anesthesia/analgesia
Systemic therapy with immunosuppressive drugs or corticoids (apart from topical and inhalational)
Any surgery within the last 30 days (apart from minor day-case procedures)  - Chronic or acute infectious disease, particularly hepatitis, AIDS, tuberculosis
No Results Posted