Abstract

BackgroundSome retrospective and in vitro studies suggest that general anesthetics influence breast cancer recurrence and metastasis. We compared the effects of general anesthetics sevoflurane versus propofol on breast cancer cell survival, proliferation and invasion in vitro. The investigation focused on effects in intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis as a mechanism for general anesthetic-mediated effects on breast cancer cell survival and metastasis.MethodsEstrogen receptor-positive (MCF7) and estrogen receptor-negative (MDA-MB-436) human breast cancer cell lines along with normal breast tissue (MCF10A) were used. Cells were exposed to sevoflurane or propofol at clinically relevant and extreme doses and durations for dose- and time-dependence studies. Cell survival, proliferation and migration following anesthetic exposure were assessed. Intracellular and extracellular Ca2+ concentrations were modulated using Ca2+ chelation and a TRPV1 Ca2+ channel antagonist to examine the role of Ca2+ in mediating anesthetic effects.ResultsSevoflurane affected breast cancer cell survival in dose-, time- and cell type-dependent manners. Sevoflurane, but not propofol, at equipotent and clinically relevant doses (2% vs. 2 μM) for 6 h significantly promoted breast cell survival in all three types of cells. Paradoxically, extreme exposure to sevoflurane (4%, 24 h) decreased survival in all three cell lines. Chelation of cytosolic Ca2+ dramatically decreased cell survival in both breast cancer lines but not control cells. Inhibition of TRPV1 receptors significantly reduced cell survival in all cell types, an effect that was partially reversed by equipotent sevoflurane but not propofol. Six-hour exposure to sevoflurane or propofol did not affect cell proliferation, metastasis or TRPV1 protein expression in any type of cell.ConclusionSevoflurane, but not propofol, at clinically relevant concentrations and durations, increased survival of breast cancer cells in vitro but had no effect on cell proliferation, migration or TRPV1 expression. Breast cancer cells require higher cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels for survival than normal breast tissue. Sevoflurane affects breast cancer cell survival via modulation of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis.

Highlights

  • Some retrospective and in vitro studies suggest that general anesthetics influence breast cancer recurrence and metastasis

  • The normal breast tissue cell line (MCF10A) along with the estrogen receptor-positive (MCF7) and estrogen receptor-negative (MDA-MB-436) cell lines demonstrated increased viability following exposure to either 2% or 4% sevoflurane for 6 h when compared to the control group (MCF10A 1MAC&2MAC P < 0.0001, MCF7 1MAC P = 0.0002, 2MAC P = 0.0021, MDA-MB-436 1MAC P = 0.0002, 2MAC P < 0.0001)

  • Calcium homeostasis and cell viability To evaluate the role of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis in the augmentation of breast cancer cell viability by sevoflurane, we modulated intracellular and extracellular Ca2+ concentrations

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Summary

Introduction

Some retrospective and in vitro studies suggest that general anesthetics influence breast cancer recurrence and metastasis. We compared the effects of general anesthetics sevoflurane versus propofol on breast cancer cell survival, proliferation and invasion in vitro. Retrospective and cohort clinical studies comparing anesthetic techniques for breast cancer lack concurrence on the benefits of intravenous propofol over inhalational anesthetics [1, 3,4,5, 7, 11, 12]. These findings call for further investigation into the mechanisms through which anesthetic techniques may alter outcomes for patients with breast cancer

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