Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2492028 | Medical Hypotheses | 2007 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
We hypothesized that outcome differences for cancer patients undergoing open surgery vs. MIS are due to differential inhibition of immune effector cell function, in response to the different surgical stimulus. This increased immunosuppression after open surgery could potentially inhibit immune effector cell tumor surveillance as well as inhibit scavenging of any residual or micrometastatic disease or of tumor cells shed at the time of the operation. The less immunosuppressive MIS may leave immune function above a threshold level where remaining tumor is cleared. This difference would lead to less recurrence and to survival advantages. A deeper understanding of the integral components of the immune response to surgery would open the door for immunomodulation strategies and be of great clinical utility in guiding neoadjuvant, surgical, or adjuvant therapeutic decisions.
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Authors
B.A. Whitson, J. D'Cunha, M.A. Maddaus,