Amling Christopher L, Riffenburgh Robert H, Sun Leon, Moul Judd W, Lance Raymond S, Kusuda Leo, Sexton Wade J, Soderdahl Douglas W, Donahue Timothy F, Foley John P, Chung Andrew K, McLeod David G
Department of Urology, Naval Medical Center, 34800 Bob Wilson Drive, San Diego, CA 92134-5000, USA.
J Clin Oncol. 2004 Feb 1;22(3):439-45. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2004.03.132. Epub 2003 Dec 22.
To determine if obesity is associated with higher prostate specific antigen recurrence rates after radical prostatectomy (RP), and to explore racial differences in body mass index (BMI) as a potential explanation for the disparity in outcome between black and white men.
A retrospective, multi-institutional pooled analysis of 3,162 men undergoing RP was conducted at nine US military medical centers between 1987 and 2002. Patients were initially categorized as obese (BMI > or = 30 kg/m(2)), overweight (BMI 25 to 30 kg/m(2)), or normal (BMI < or = 25 kg/m(2)). For analysis, normal and overweight groups were combined (BMI < 30 kg/m(2)) and compared with the obese group (BMI > or = 30 kg/m(2)) with regard to biochemical recurrence (prostate-specific antigen > or = 0.2 ng/mL) after RP.
Of 3,162 patients, 600 (19.0%) were obese and 2,562 (81%) were not obese. BMI was an independent predictor of higher Gleason grade cancer (P <.001) and was associated with a higher risk of biochemical recurrence (P =.027). Blacks had higher BMI (P <.001) and higher recurrence rates (P =.003) than whites. Both BMI (P =.028) and black race (P =.002) predicted higher prostate specific antigen recurrence rates. In multivariate analysis of race, BMI, and pathologic factors, black race (P =.021) remained a significant independent predictor of recurrence.
Obesity is associated with higher grade cancer and higher recurrence rates after RP. Black men have higher recurrence rates and greater BMI than white men. These findings support the hypothesis that obesity is associated with progression of latent to clinically significant prostate cancer (PC) and suggest that BMI may account, in part, for the racial variability in PC risk.
确定肥胖是否与前列腺癌根治术(RP)后前列腺特异性抗原复发率升高相关,并探讨体重指数(BMI)的种族差异,以此作为黑人和白人男性预后差异的潜在解释。
对1987年至2002年间在美国9家军事医疗中心接受RP的3162名男性进行回顾性、多机构汇总分析。患者最初被分为肥胖(BMI≥30kg/m²)、超重(BMI 25至30kg/m²)或正常(BMI≤25kg/m²)。为进行分析,将正常组和超重组合并(BMI<30kg/m²),并与肥胖组(BMI≥30kg/m²)就RP后的生化复发(前列腺特异性抗原≥0.2ng/mL)进行比较。
在3162名患者中,600名(19.0%)为肥胖患者,2562名(81%)非肥胖。BMI是高Gleason分级癌症的独立预测因素(P<.001),并与生化复发风险较高相关(P=.027)。黑人的BMI(P<.001)和复发率(P=.003)均高于白人。BMI(P=.028)和黑人种族(P=.002)均预测前列腺特异性抗原复发率较高。在种族、BMI和病理因素的多变量分析中,黑人种族(P=.021)仍然是复发的显著独立预测因素。
肥胖与RP后更高分级的癌症和更高的复发率相关。黑人男性的复发率和BMI高于白人男性。这些发现支持了肥胖与潜伏性前列腺癌进展为临床显著性前列腺癌(PC)相关的假设,并表明BMI可能部分解释了PC风险的种族差异。