RT Journal Article T1 How Anesthetic, Analgesic and Other Non-Surgical Techniques During Cancer Surgery Might Affect Postoperative Oncologic Outcomes: A Summary of Current State of Evidence. A1 Forget, Patrice A1 Aguirre, Jose A A1 Bencic, Ivanka A1 Borgeat, Alain A1 Cama, Allessandro A1 Condron, Claire A1 Eintrei, Christina A1 Eroles, Pilar A1 Gupta, Anil A1 Hales, Tim G A1 Ionescu, Daniela A1 Johnson, Mark A1 Kabata, Pawel A1 Kirac, Iva A1 Ma, Daqing A1 Mokini, Zhirajr A1 Guerrero Orriach, Jose Luis A1 Retsky, Michael A1 Sandrucci, Sergio A1 Siekmann, Wiebke A1 Štefančić, Ljilja A1 Votta-Vellis, Gina A1 Connolly, Cara A1 Buggy, Donal K1 analgesia K1 anesthesia K1 cancer AB The question of whether anesthetic, analgesic or other perioperative intervention during cancer resection surgery might influence long-term oncologic outcomes has generated much attention over the past 13 years. A wealth of experimental and observational clinical data have been published, but the results of prospective, randomized clinical trials are awaited. The European Union supports a pan-European network of researchers, clinicians and industry partners engaged in this question (COST Action 15204: Euro-Periscope). In this narrative review, members of the Euro-Periscope network briefly summarize the current state of evidence pertaining to the potential effects of the most commonly deployed anesthetic and analgesic techniques and other non-surgical interventions during cancer resection surgery on tumor recurrence or metastasis. SN 2072-6694 YR 2019 FD 2019-04-28 LK https://hdl.handle.net/10668/26444 UL https://hdl.handle.net/10668/26444 LA en DS RISalud RD Apr 8, 2025