Morphine Analgesia, Cannabinoid Receptor 2, and Opioid Growth Factor Receptor Cancer Tissue Expression Improve Survival after Pancreatic Cancer Surgery.
Lubomir VeceraPetr PrasilJosef SrovnalEmil BertaMonika VidlarovaTomas GabrhelikPavla KourilovaMartin LovecekPavel SkalickyJozef SkardaZdenek KalaPavel MichálekMarian HajduchPublished in: Cancers (2023)
Pancreatic cancer (PDAC) has a poor prognosis despite surgical removal and adjuvant therapy. Additionally, the effects of postoperative analgesia with morphine and piritramide on survival among PDAC patients are unknown, as are their interactions with opioid/cannabinoid receptor gene expressions in PDAC tissue. Cancer-specific survival data for 71 PDAC patients who underwent radical surgery followed by postoperative analgesia with morphine ( n = 48) or piritramide ( n = 23) were therefore analyzed in conjunction with opioid/cannabinoid receptor gene expressions in the patients' tumors. Receptor gene expressions were determined using the quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. Patients receiving morphine had significantly longer cancer-specific survival (CSS) than those receiving piritramide postoperative analgesia (median 22.4 vs. 15 months; p = 0.038). This finding was supported by multivariate modelling ( p < 0.001). The morphine and piritramide groups had similar morphine equipotent doses, receptor expression, and baseline characteristics. The opioid/cannabinoid receptor gene expression was analyzed in a group of 130 pancreatic cancer patients. Of the studied receptors, high cannabinoid receptor 2 (CB2) and opioid growth factor receptor (OGFR) gene expressions have a positive influence on the length of overall survival (OS; p = 0.029, resp. p = 0.01). Conversely, high delta opioid receptor gene expression shortened OS ( p = 0.043). Multivariate modelling indicated that high CB2 and OGFR expression improved OS (HR = 0.538, p = 0.011, resp. HR = 0.435, p = 0.001), while high OPRD receptor expression shortened OS (HR = 2.264, p = 0.002). Morphine analgesia, CB2, and OGFR cancer tissue gene expression thus improved CSS resp. OS after radical PDAC surgery, whereas delta opioid receptor expression shortened OS.
Keyphrases
- pain management
- gene expression
- poor prognosis
- growth factor
- chronic pain
- end stage renal disease
- papillary thyroid
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- minimally invasive
- dna methylation
- binding protein
- coronary artery bypass
- genome wide
- peritoneal dialysis
- squamous cell
- high resolution
- coronary artery disease
- postoperative pain
- artificial intelligence
- atrial fibrillation
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- transcription factor