Influence of laparoscopic and conventional cholecystectomy upon cell-mediated immunity

Abstract
Surgery, trauma and anaesthesia induce a state of transient immunosuppression. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy has several well documented clinical advantages over traditional cholecystectomy and provokes a lower acute phase response, thought to be a result of the smaller wound size. The influence of laparoscopic cholecystectomy (21 patients) and conventional open cholecystectomy (13 patients) upon components of the cell‐mediated immune system was investigated. Cell‐mediated immunity was studied by in vitro assays of T lymphocyte proliferation to different mitogens, and by natural killer cell cytotoxicity using a standard 51Cr release assay. Blood samples were taken before and 24 h after the start of the operation. In the sample taken after operation there was significant depression of T lymphocyte proliferation to phytohaemagglutinin (stimulation index 149.4 versus 33.3, P < 0.002), staphy‐lococcal enterotoxin B (85.2 versus 52.6, P = 0.01) and toxic shock syndrome toxin (48.4 versus 14.8, P = 0.08) in the group of patients who underwent open surgery, but not in the group treated by laparoscopic surgery. There was a small but statistically insignificant decrease of natural killer cell cytotoxicity in both groups of patients. These findings suggest that laparoscopic cholecystectomy causes less depression of cell‐mediated immunity than open cholecystectomy.