Perioperative pain, psychological distress, and immune function in men undergoing prostatectomy for cancer of the prostate Journal Article


Authors: Yermal, S. J.; Witek-Janusek, L.; Peterson, J.; Mathews, H. L.
Article Title: Perioperative pain, psychological distress, and immune function in men undergoing prostatectomy for cancer of the prostate
Abstract: Prostate cancer is a leading malignancy in men, and prostatectomy is widely used for its treatment. Psychological distress and pain are commonly experienced in the perioperative period, and both can contribute to suppression of the immune response to cancer. This study evaluated perioperative pain, psychological distress, and immune function in men undergoing prostatectomy. Men were evaluated prior to surgery, 1 and 2 days postoperatively and 4-6 weeks postoperatively. Compared to cancer-free men, the prostatectomy group reported increased perceived stress, depression, confusion, and anxiety prior to surgery. During the 2 postoperative days, mood disturbance and anxiety persisted and were accompanied by mild elevations in pain and reduced vigor. At 4-6 weeks postoperative, mood, pain, and immune function were similar to those of the cancer-free group; however, the prostatectomy group continued to report significant elevations in anxiety. Natural killer cell activity (NKCA) was significantly reduced on Day 1 after prostatectomy, but by postoperative Day 2, NKCA returned to a level similar to that of the cancer-free group. The reduction in NKCA was not accompanied by changes in circulating immune cells, demonstrating that this reduction represented a functional change in NKCA. No correlations between immune variables and pain or psychological variables were found, suggesting that the postoperative reduction in NKCA was likely the result of the physical stress of the surgical experience. Suppression of immune defenses during the critical postoperative period can place cancer patients at risk for nascent tumor seeding. Additional interventions are needed to reduce this risk.
Journal Title: Biological research for nursing
Volume: 11
Issue: 4
ISSN: 1552-4175
Publisher: Unknown  
Journal Place: United States
Date Published: 2010
Start Page: 351
End Page: 362
Language: eng
DOI/URL:
Notes: LR: 20100326; GR: F31 NR008072-02/NR/NINR NIH HHS/United States; JID: 9815758; 2009/08/12 09:00 [entrez]; 2009/08/12 09:00 [pubmed]; 2010/07/14 06:00 [medline]; ppublish