Abstract

Plasma vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) levels are elevated for 2-4 weeks after minimally invasive colorectal resection (MICR). VEGF induces wound and tumor angiogenesis by binding to endothelial cell (EC)-bound VEGF-receptor 1 (VEGFR1) and VEGFR2. Soluble receptors (sVEGFR1, sVEGFR2) sequester VEGF in the blood and decrease VEGF's proangiogenic effect. The importance of the MICR-related VEGF changes depends on the effect of surgical procedures on sVEGFR1 and sVEGFR2; this study assessed levels of these proteins after MICR for benign indications. Blood samples were taken (n=39) preoperatively (preop) and on postoperative days (POD) 1 and 3; in most cases a fourth sample was drawn between POD 7 and 30. sVEGFR1 and sVEGFR2 levels were measured via enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), which detects free and VEGF bound soluble receptor. Late samples were bundled into POD 7-13 and POD 14-30 time points. Results are reported as mean and standard deviation. The data was assessed with paired-samples t-test. Preop, mean plasma sVEGFR2 level (9,203.7+/-1,934.3 pg/ml) was significantly higher than the sVEGFR1 value (132.5+/-126.2 pg/ml). sVEGFR2 levels were significantly lower on POD 1 (6,957.8+/-1,947.7 pg/ml,) and POD 3 (7,085.6+/-2,000.2 pg/ml), whereas sVEGFR1 levels were significantly higher on POD 1 (220.0+/-132.8 pg/ml) and POD 3 (182.7+/-102.1 pg/ml) versus preop results. No differences were found on POD 7-13 or 14-30. sVEGFR2 values decreased and sVEGFR1 levels increased early after MICR; due to its much higher baseline, the sVEGFR2 changes dominate. The net result is less VEGF bound to soluble receptor and more free plasma VEGF.

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