ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Regional Anesthesia and Lung Cancer Recurrence

NeuroTherapia, Inc. logo

NeuroTherapia, Inc.

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Lung Cancer

Treatments

Other: Balanced general anesthesia and postoperative opioids
Other: General-epidural anesthesia

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Test the effect of combined regiona/general anesthesia on lung cancer recurrence compared to general anesthesia alone.

Full description

Surgery is the primary treatment of lung cancer, but surgery releases tumor cells into the systemic circulation. Whether this minimal residual disease results in clinical metastases is a function of host defense. At least three perioperative factors shift the balance toward initiation and progression of minimal residual disease. (1) Surgery per se depresses cell-mediated immunity, reduces concentrations of tumor-related anti-angiogenic factors (e.g., angiostatin and endostatin), and increases concentrations of pro-angiogenic factors such as VEGF. (2) Anesthesia impairs numerous immune functions, including neutrophil, macrophages, dendritic cells, T lymphocytes (T-cell), and Natural killer cell (NK-cell) functions. (3) Opioid analgesics inhibit both cellular and humoral immune function in humans, and promote tumor growth in rodents. Regional analgesia attenuates each of these adverse effects. For example, regional anesthesia largely prevents the neuroendocrine stress response to surgery by blocking afferent neural transmission. With combined regional and general anesthesia/analgesia, the amount of general anesthetic required is much reduced - as is, presumably, immune suppression. And finally, regional analgesia provides superb pain relief, essentially obliterating the need for postoperative opioids. Animal studies show that regional anesthesia improves natural kill cell function and reduces the metastatic burden in animals inoculated with carcinoma cells. Preliminary retrospective data in cancer patients showed, that paravertebral analgesia for breast cancer surgery reduced risk of recurrence or metastasis by 40% during a 2.5 to 4-year follow-up period.

The investigators thus propose to evaluate the effect of combined epidural-general anesthesia compared to general anesthesia on cancer recurrence semi-annually over a period of 5 years.

Enrollment

67 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Primary non-small cell lung cancer (stage 1-3) as determined according to the IASLC Lung Cancer Staging Project;
  • Scheduled for potentially curative tumor resection;
  • Written informed consent, including willingness to be randomized to epidural anesthesia/analgesia plus general anesthesia or to general anesthesia and postoperative opioid analgesia.

Exclusion criteria

  • Any contraindication to epidural anesthesia, (including coagulopathy, abnormal anatomy).
  • Any contraindication to midazolam, propofol, sevoflurane, fentanyl, morphine, or hydromorphone.
  • Age < 18 or > 85 years old.
  • Other cancer not believed by the attending surgeon to be in long-term remission.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

67 participants in 2 patient groups

General-epidural anesthesia
Active Comparator group
Description:
Epidural and general anesthesia
Treatment:
Other: General-epidural anesthesia
General anesthesia
Active Comparator group
Description:
General anesthesia alone
Treatment:
Other: Balanced general anesthesia and postoperative opioids

Trial contacts and locations

2

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems