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Cancer Surgery
Surgery poses many risks to a cancer patient. The known
side effects associated with the surgical removal of tumors include anesthesia
complications, infections, and immune suppression.
A surgery side effect of concern to cancer patients is that the removal
of the primary tumor may directly stimulate cancer spread (the propagation
of metastatic lesions). Metastatic tumors require the formation of new
tumor blood vessels (called angiogenesis) to grow.
Once the primary tumor has been surgically removed, the amount of endostatin
and angiostatin to control new tumor blood vessel growth is drastically
reduced, and metastasized lesions begin proliferating out of control.
If the immune depression that surgery induces is factored in, the failure
of surgery to meaningfully prolong the life of cancer patients becomes
quite understandable. Surgery reduces growth control factors (endostatin
and angiostatin) while simultaneously weakening the immune surveillance
that might be keeping metastatic lesions under some degree of control
(Oliver et al. 1996).
Cancer has long baffled medical science. Until recently, scientists did
not fully understand why the disease so often begins rapidly spreading
throughout the body after surgery. This protocol identifies previously
unknown factors involved in the long-term failure of cancer surgeries.
The educated patient now has access to drugs to facilitate systemic control
of cancer rather than to promote metastasis.
Even more exciting is the news that drugs such as endostatin and angiostatin
are in clinical trials. If the FDA approves these drugs, the surgical
removal of a large primary tumor might actually "cure" many
more cancer patients. In the meantime, there are other anti - angiogenesis
drugs that may help prevent the rapid growth of metastatic lesions after
the primary tumor is removed.
How Tumors GrOW
Almost every tissue in the body derives blood from the thinner-than-a-hair
capillaries that lace our tissues. Through capillaries, nutrients, oxygen,
and various signaling molecules diffuse into cells. These mechanisms maintain
health, fight disease, and allow the body to flourish and grow.
Tumors start out without a vascular circulation. In the early stages
of tumor development, they are limited to nutrients that can diffuse from
the nearest capillaries. Then, tumors begin to stimulate healthy tissue
to make thousands of new blood vessels to supply the cancerous growth--a
process called angiogenesis. Without this ability to nourish itself and
grow, a tumor cannot enlarge. If the blood supply can be reduced or cut
off, the tumor will shrink or die.
Removing One Tumor May Stimulate
the Growth of Many MoRE
Recurrence is the point when cancer cells from the primary tumor are
detected following the primary treatment for the cancer.
Ipsilateral breast tumor recurrence following conservative surgery and
radiation for early stage invasive cancer occurs in approximately 15%
of all patients at 10 years and is reduced with surgical excisions which
achieve negative margins (Fowble 1999). Local recurrence continues to
be a major problem following surgical treatment for rectal cancer, because
of the frequency with which it occurs (varying from 4% to 51%), its impact
on quality of life, the fact that treatment is rarely successful (McLeod
1997), and the proposed ways of reducing this remain controversial ( McCall
et al. 1995).
All patients undergoing laparoscopic surgery for malignancies should
have careful follow-up with special attention to the port sites, as port-site
metastasis after laparoscopic lymphadenectomy is a phenomenon that occurs
following this type of cancer surgery ( Tjalma et al. 2001).
Several drugs--including interferons, steroids, and certain hormonal
agents--have been developed to stop or slow angiogenesis. In fact, at
least 11 anti-angiogenic drugs are in clinical trials, and three have
proved effective enough to make it to the final phase.
Some of the drugs, like endostatin, are derived from natural proteins,
while others are based on smaller molecules. Ironically, one promising
drug in clinical trials is thalidomide, which once was sold as a sedative
that caused notorious birth defects.
Another drug, 2-methoxyestradiol (2-ME), is a natural estrogen metabolite
believed to be an inhibitor of angiogenesis and also an anti - tumor agent.
In addition, researchers are investigating a drug called Col-3 and are
negotiating with several biotechnology companies to examine other anticancer
compounds.
Of all the anti - angiogenic drugs, endostatin and angiostatin appear
to hold the greatest potential for saving lives. These drugs are nontoxic
and have shown efficacy against every type of cancer tested. These drugs
suppressed metastatic tumor growth rates by 90% (Hajitou et al. 2002).
Another study showed primary tumors regressing to become dormant microscopic
lesions (O'Reilly et al. 1997).
Based on this new information, angiostatin and endostatin may greatly
increase the number of cancer patients who become disease-free after surgery.
How to Enter Clinical TriaLS
Endostatin was the first endogenous angiogenesis inhibitor to enter into
clinical trials. Endostatin given to 21 advanced solid tumor patients
daily as a 1-hour intravenous infusion (for 28 days) was well - tolerated
(Thomas et al 2003).
The safety and efficacy of recombinant human Angiostatin protein administered
in combination with chemotherapy (paclitaxel and carboplatin) to patients
with non-small-cell lung cancer is currently being investigated in a clinical
trial: http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct/search?term=angiostatin
For more information about cancer clinical trials call the Cancer Information
Service, (800) 4-CANCER.
Physicians may request information about trials from the PDQ Search Service
by calling (800) 345-3300, faxing (800) 380-1575, or e-mailing pdqsearch@icicc.nci.nih.gov.
There are many anti - angiogenesis drugs in clinical studies. In some
cases, the FDA may allow an unapproved drug to be released before it is
officially approved. Here are some of the anti - angiogenesis drugs being
tested and the sponsoring companies:
Drug |
Phase |
Sponsor |
TNP-40 |
II |
TAP Pharmeceuticals Inc., Deerfield,
WI |
Squalimine |
II |
Genera Pharmaceuticals Inc., Plymouth
Meeting, PA |
Vitaxin |
I |
Ixsys Inc., San Diego , CA |
Thalidomide |
II |
Extremed Inc., Rockville, MD |
RhuMab, VEGF |
II |
Genentech, Inc., South San Fransisco,
CA |
SU5416 |
II |
Sugen Inc., Redwood City, CA |
Marimastat |
III |
British Biotech Inc., Annapolis, MD
|
Bay 12-9566 |
III |
Bayer Corp., West Haven, CT |
AG3340 |
III |
Agouron Pharmaceuticals Inc., La Jolla,
CA |
Col-3 |
I |
CollaGenex Pharmaceuticals, Newton,
PA |
CM101 |
I |
Carbomed Brentwood, TN |
The First anti-angiogenesis
drug is approved
After many years of study, the drug Avastatin® has been approved
by the FDA to treat colon cancer. It may also be effective against other
cancers.
In a well-performed Phase III trial, Avastatin® was shown impressively
to prolong survival for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer that
could not be removed by surgery (unresectable). ( O'Neil
et al. 2003).
Avastatin® (bevacizumab) is an anti - angiogenesis drug, used in
molecular targeted therapy to stop tumors from making new blood vessels.
It works by keeping VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) from initiating
the growth of new blood vessels. Without new blood vessels, tumor growth
is inhibited. Avastatin® is now being studied for the treatment of
many different cancers.
Patients with newly diagnosed metastatic colon cancer who received Avastatin®
along with a chemotherapy combination (known as IFL) had substantially
longer overall survival times than patients who received the chemotherapy
but with a placebo instead of bevacizumab.
A randomized Phase III trial to compare the effectiveness of two combination
chemotherapy regimens with or without bevacizumab in treating patients
who have locally advanced, metastatic, or recurrent colorectal cancer
is underway via the National Institutes of Health (NIH). A Phase I trial
to study the effectiveness of bevacizumab combined with fluorouracil and
external-beam radiation therapy in treating patients who have stage II
or stage III rectal cancer is also ongoing via the NIH.
Protecting Against Surgery-Induced
Immune SuppressiON
Human and animal studies demonstrate that surgery suppresses immune function.
In fact, surgical stress directly reduces natural killer (NK) cell activity,
and other immune factors (Hansbrough et al. 1984; Pollo c k et al. 1991;
Udelsman et al. 1991). NK cells have a fundamental role in destroying
cancer cells and are involved in inhibiting metastasis (Herberman et al.
1981; Gorelik et al. 1982; Hanna 1985; Wiltrout et al. 1985; Ben-Eliyabu
et al. 1999).
A regrettable consequence of surgery is suppression of vital NK cell
activity, thereby making the patient more susceptible to developing metastatic
lesions. In the animal model, surgery-induced immune suppression has been
linked to tumor metastasis to the lung (Page et al. 1994 a ; 1994b; Ben-Eliyahu
et al. 1999). Human studies demonstrate that those with low NK cell activity
have an increased risk of metastatic lesions (Levy et al. 1985; Schantz
et al. 1987; Tartter et al. 1987; Fujisawa et al. 1997; Koda et al. 1997).
Despite the known immune-suppressing effects of surgery, removal of the
primary tumor is often mandatory in order to provide the cancer patient
with an opportunity for a cure. What oncologists have overlooked are the
many adjuvant therapies that can promote immune function, specifically
natural killer cell activity.
In the Cancer
Adjuvant Therapy protocol , natural approaches of boosting immune
function are discussed. The cancer patient contemplating surgery may consider
supplementation with melatonin, lactoferrin, echinacea, and a special
preparation called "MGN-3" for the purpose of enhancing NK cell
activity (Ghoneum et al. 2000; Currier et al. 2001; Huang et al. 2002;
Tsuda et al. 2002). While these therapies are by no means a cure for cancer,
they do provide patients with an opportunity to mitigate the immune suppression
associated with surgical procedures.
Avoid Analgesic Drugs That
Promote MetastasIS
After cancer surgery, the patient often experiences pain and requests
an analgesic drug for immediate relief. The drug of choice is often morphine
or an other opiates. The problem with these drugs is that they impair
immune function, specifically NK activity, lymphocyte-macrophage production,
and other key immune cytokines. It is during this postsurgical period
that healthy immune function is required to kill cancer cells that have
escaped from the primary tumor and are seeking to set up metastatic colonies.
Unfortunately, morphine is often prescribed to post - surgery cancer
patients at the very time when optimal immune function is most needed
to eradicate residual tumor cells. Instead of accepting morphine and other
opiates, ask your doctor for an analgesic drug called "tramadol."
Unlike morphine, tramadol does not suppress immune function. On the contrary,
tramadol has been shown to stimulate NK activity in animals and humans.
In a study on rats, tramadol was able to block the enhancement of lung
metastasis induced by surgery, whereas morphine did not produce this beneficial
effect (Gaspani et al. 2002).
Because tramadol produces a good analgesic effect combined with immune-enhancing
properties, it may be the drug of choice for controlling postoperative
pain in cancer patients.
Morphine has other deleterious effects on the cancer patient. In addition
to impairing immune function, morphine stimulates angiogenesis (new blood
vessel growth that feeds rapidly dividing tumors), activates a tumor cell
survival signal, and inhibits apoptosis (programmed cell death) of cancer
cells (Gupta K. et al. 2002). All of these negative effects occur at morphine
doses typically given to cancer patients.
In one study, morphine was specifically shown to promote the growth of
a human breast tumor implanted into an animal. Interestingly, an analgesic-antagonist
drug called naloxone inhibited tumor growth (Maneckjee et al. 1990). Based
on these findings, it was suggested that the pro - angiogenesis effect
of opioids (morphine) might be detrimental to cancer patients (Gupta et
al. 2002).
These studies help explain why cancer patients given morphine often succumb
quickly. This may be desirable for terminal cancer patients in the hospice
setting. For cancer patients undergoing potentially curative surgery,
it appears imperative that they refuse morphine and any other opiate-type
analgesic. They should instead request the drug tramadol to alleviate
postoperative pain.
SUMMARY
For many forms of cancer the surgical removal of the primary tumor is
crucial if long-term remission is to occur. Anti-angiogenesis drugs given
prior to cancer surgery may improve the chances of a long-term remission.
These drugs would also theoretically be of value in the post - operative
setting, though they may slow the rate of healing.
Surgery suppresses important immune functions needed to kill metastatic
tumor cells. The patient should consider taking supplements that enhance
immune function, such as melatonin, lactoferrin, and garlic, before and
after surgery.
Avoiding analgesic drugs, such as morphine and other opiates, helps prevent
immune suppression and the development of tumor angiogenesis. For pain
suppression in the postoperative environment, the drug tramadol should
be requested in lieu of morphine or other opiates.
For cancer patients undergoing surgery, or any other type of cancer therapy,
it is important to review the information that appears in the Cancer
Adjuvant Treatment protocol. Therapies discussed in this protocol
can help protect against surgically induced immune suppression, thus improving
the odds of long-term survival.
Product availability
Melatonin,
lactoferrin,
echinacea,
and MGN-3
are available by phoning (800) 544-4440 or by ordering
online.
Staying Informed
The information published in this protocol is only as current as the
day the manuscript was sent to the printer. This protocol raises many
issues that are subject to change as new data emerge. Furthermore, cancer
is still a disease with unacceptably high mortality rates, and none of
our suggested regimens can guarantee a cure.
The Life Extension Foundation is constantly uncovering information to
provide to cancer patients. A special website has been established for
the purpose of updating patients on new findings that directly pertain
to the published cancer protocols. Whenever Life Extension discovers information
that may benefit cancer patients it will be posted on the website www.lefcancer.org.
Before utilizing the cancer protocols in this book, we suggest that you
check www.lefcancer.org to see
if any substantive changes have been made to the recommendations described
in this protocol. Based on the sheer number of newly published findings,
there could be significant alterations to the information you have just
read.
Alternatively, call 1-800-226-2370 and ask a Health Advisor if your topic
of interest has been updated on the website - www.lefcancer.org. |