• Int Anesthesiol Clin · Jan 1997

    Review

    Anesthesia for patients with carcinoid syndrome.

    • D J Vaughan and M D Brunner.
    • Northwick Park and St. Mark's NHS Trust, Harrow, Middlesex, England.
    • Int Anesthesiol Clin. 1997 Jan 1;35(4):129-42.

    AbstractCarcinoid syndrome, although rare, can create serious problems to the anesthetist, both by the nature and variability of clinical manifestations and by the complications that can occur peroperatively. Recent research has led to a better understanding of the pathophysiology of the disease process. However, modern medicine is far from unraveling the precise nature and physiological effects of all the peptide mediators produced by these tumors. The severity of symptoms does not predict the severity of perioperative complications, so that patients with minor preoperative symptoms may have significant intraoperative complications. While urinary 5-HIAA levels provide a good indicator of disease progression, they cannot predict the degree or type of physiological response to intraoperative tumor manipulation. Indeed, urinary 5-HIAA may be normal both in the presence of a clinical diagnosis of carcinoid syndrome and in the face of a peroperative carcinoid crisis. The keys to successful anesthetic management of patients with carcinoid syndrome are good communication between endocrinologist, anesthetist, and surgeon and preoperative optimization of the patient. This includes appropriate investigation and treatment of the effects of carcinoid peptides and the prevention of their release from tumors. If possible, advice should be sought from centers with experience at managing this group of patients. Octreotide has largely replaced the use of other drugs both for symptomatic control and acute treatment of the symptoms associated with carcinoid syndrome. However, other drugs, such as aprotinin, still have a significant place in the symptomatic control and treatment of peroperative complications, as serotonin is only one of a large variety of peptides responsible for the clinical effects of this disease. Anesthetic technique should be aimed at minimizing carcinoid mediator release, in response to stress it induction of anesthesia and tracheal intubation and during tumor manipulation. It is equally important to prepare for carcinoid crisis by, for example, ordering drugs, which are otherwise uncommonly used in the theater setting, ahead of time. Cardiovascular instability, particularly hypotension, is common, so that full monitoring and vigilance is vital to predict its onset. The current surgical view of management is that, while curative resection of carcinoid tumors less than 2 cm in diameter with no evidence of invasion or metastatic spread is appropriate, patients with disseminated disease should be medically managed unless symptom control is poor. The exceptions to this are those patients with early and correctable carcinoid cardiac disease and those who require palliative procedures such as defunctioning obstructed bowel. Survival rates in patients following excision of gastric and appendical carcinoid tumors approach those of the general population as a whole and the chance of metastasis is extremely low. Only two series have been published in the anesthetic literature on anesthesia for patients with carcinoid syndrome, although there are many single-case reports. Despite the rarity of this syndrome, further formal studies into the anesthetic management of this condition should be encouraged.

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