Kamat Ashish M, Shock Ryan P, Naya Yoshio, Rosser Charles J, Slaton Joel W, Pisters Louis L
Department of Urology, University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
Urology. 2004 Jan;63(1):46-50. doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2003.08.009.
To identify whether the body mass index (BMI) has any adverse effect on the prognosis of patients with established renal cell carcinoma, given the increasing prevalence of obesity and the rising incidence of renal cell carcinoma in the United States.
We reviewed the records of patients who underwent nephrectomy for localized disease between 1985 and 1998 at our institution. Patients were grouped according to BMI as normal (less than 25 kg/m2), overweight (25 to 30 kg/m2), or obese (more than 30 kg/m2). Cox regression analysis was used to determine the significant predictors of metastasis and survival.
A total of 400 patients met the inclusion criteria. On univariate analysis, normal BMI (P = 0.018), pathologic stage (P <0.0001), Fuhrman grade (P = 0.007), maximal tumor size (P = 0.005), and time to recurrence (P <0.0001) were significant predictors of disease-specific death. On multivariate regression analysis, the time to metastasis (P <0.0001) was the best predictor of disease-specific death, followed by BMI (normal versus overweight or obese; P = 0.006) and pathologic stage (P = 0.007). Patients with a normal BMI who had pathologic Stage pT3 or greater and developed metastasis within 19 months of surgery had the worst prognosis, with a disease-specific death rate of 52.0%.
Our findings suggest that overweight and obese patients with renal cell carcinoma have a more favorable prognosis than patients with a normal BMI. If others confirm our finding that a high BMI confers a survival advantage to patients undergoing nephrectomy, BMI may prove to be an important prognostic factor in renal cell carcinoma.
鉴于美国肥胖症患病率不断上升以及肾细胞癌发病率不断增加,确定体重指数(BMI)对已确诊肾细胞癌患者的预后是否有任何不良影响。
我们回顾了1985年至1998年在我们机构因局限性疾病接受肾切除术的患者记录。患者根据BMI分为正常(小于25kg/m²)、超重(25至30kg/m²)或肥胖(大于30kg/m²)。采用Cox回归分析来确定转移和生存的显著预测因素。
共有400名患者符合纳入标准。单因素分析显示,正常BMI(P = 0.018)、病理分期(P <0.0001)、Fuhrman分级(P = 0.007)、最大肿瘤大小(P = 0.005)和复发时间(P <0.0001)是疾病特异性死亡的显著预测因素。多因素回归分析显示,转移时间(P <0.0001)是疾病特异性死亡的最佳预测因素,其次是BMI(正常与超重或肥胖;P = 0.006)和病理分期(P = 0.007)。BMI正常、病理分期为pT3或更高且在手术后19个月内发生转移的患者预后最差,疾病特异性死亡率为52.0%。
我们的研究结果表明,肾细胞癌超重和肥胖患者的预后比BMI正常的患者更有利。如果其他人证实我们的发现,即高BMI赋予接受肾切除术的患者生存优势,那么BMI可能被证明是肾细胞癌的一个重要预后因素。