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Survival after primary breast cancer surgery following propofol or sevoflurane general anesthesia—A retrospective, multicenter, database analysis of 6305 Swedish patients
Author(s) -
Enlund Mats,
Berglund Anders,
Ahlstrand Rebecca,
Walldén Jakob,
Lundberg Johan,
Wärnberg Fredrik,
Ekman Andreas,
Sjöblom Widfeldt Nina,
Enlund Anna,
Bergkvist Leif
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acta anaesthesiologica scandinavica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.738
H-Index - 107
eISSN - 1399-6576
pISSN - 0001-5172
DOI - 10.1111/aas.13644
Subject(s) - medicine , sevoflurane , propofol , breast cancer , hazard ratio , retrospective cohort study , propensity score matching , proportional hazards model , anesthesia , cancer , anesthetic , surgery , confidence interval
Background Retrospective studies indicate that the choice of anesthetic can affect long‐term cancer survival. Propofol seems to have an advantage over sevoflurane. However, this is questioned for breast cancer. We gathered a large cohort of breast cancer surgery patients from seven Swedish hospitals and hypothesized that general anesthesia with propofol would be superior to sevoflurane anesthesia regarding long‐term breast cancer survival. Methods We identified all patients who were anaesthetized for breast cancer surgery between 2006 and 2012. The patients were matched to the Swedish Breast Cancer Quality Register, to retrieve tumor characteristics, prognostic factors, and adjuvant treatment as well as date of death. Overall survival between patients undergoing sevoflurane and propofol anesthesia was analyzed with different statistical approaches: (a) multiple Cox regression models adjusted for demographic, oncological, and multiple control variables, (b) propensity score matching on the same variables, but also including the participating centers as a cofactor in a separate analysis. Results The database analysis identified 6305 patients. The 5‐year survival rates were 91.0% and 81.8% for the propofol and sevoflurane group, respectively, in the final model ( P = .126). Depending on the statistical adjustment method used, different results were obtained, from a non‐significant to a "proposed" and even a "determined" difference in survival that favored propofol, with a maximum of 9.2 percentage points higher survival rate at 5 years (hazard ratio 1.46, 95% CI 1.10‐1.95). Conclusions It seems that propofol may have a survival advantage compared with sevoflurane among breast cancer patients, but the inherent weaknesses of retrospective analyses were made apparent.