Background and Purpose: Previous investigators have suggested that port-sit
e recurrences are possibly a result of abdominal insufflation, forcing viab
le cancer cells into the circulation to metastasize and thrive in areas of
trauma. Using a syngeneic animal cancer model, we tested the hypothesis tha
t pneumoperitoneum increases the incidence of wound metastasis by a blood-b
orne mechanism.
Methods: Male BD IX rats (N = 150) were injected intraperitoneally with 2 x
10(5) viable syngeneic 1,2-dimethylhydralazine-induced colon cancer cells
(DHD-K12). Animals were divided into three groups: A (abdominal insufflatio
n with 3-cm incision on the back into muscle remote from the peritoneum); B
(3-cm back incision alone); and C (control group with 3-cm midline abdomin
al incision). Three weeks after surgery, the animals were euthanized and au
topsied.
Results: In the two groups with back wounds, the incidence of cancer growth
at the incision was zero, as demonstrated grossly and by histologic sample
(A: 0/47, B: 0/43). In contrast, the autopsied control group had a 42% inc
idence of metastasis to the wound (25/59). There seemed to be no difference
in the distribution of intra-abdominal disease between those rats that und
erwent insufflation and those that did not.
Conclusion: It is unlikely that pneumoperitoneum promotes hematogenous woun
d implantation of free intraperitoneal cancer cells.