Corley Douglas A, Kubo Ai, Zhao Wei
Kaiser Permanente Division of Research, 2000 Broadway, Oakland, CA 94612, USA.
Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2008 Feb;17(2):352-8. doi: 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-07-0748.
Esophageal adenocarcinoma is rapidly increasing in incidence. Body mass index (BMI) is a risk factor, but its distribution does not reflect the demographic distribution of the cancer (which is highest among White men). Abdominal obesity patterns may explain this discordance, but no studies exist to date.
Nested case-control study within 206,974 members of the Kaiser Permanente multiphasic health checkup cohort; subjects received detailed questionnaires, a standardized examination including BMI and anthropometric measurements, and follow-up of esophageal and cardia cancers using registry data.
101 incident esophageal adenocarcinomas, 105 cardia adenocarcinomas, and 144 esophageal squamous cell carcinomas were detected (BMI data available for all cases; abdominal measurements for a subset). Increasing abdominal diameter was strongly associated with an increased risk of esophageal adenocarcinoma [odds ratio (OR), 3.47; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 1.29-9.33; abdominal diameter, > or =25 versus <20 cm]. Adjustment for BMI did not diminish this association (BMI-adjusted OR, 4.78; 95% CI, 1.14-20.11). The association was also not diminished by adjustment for gastroesophageal reflux-type symptoms, although reflux-type symptoms were separately associated with both abdominal diameter and cancer risk. Abdominal diameter was not associated with the risk of cardia adenocarcinomas (OR, 1.28; 95% CI, 0.38-4.25; diameter, > or =25 versus <20 cm) or esophageal squamous cell carcinomas (OR, 0.78; 95% CI, 0.32-1.92).
Increasing abdominal diameter was associated with an increased risk of esophageal adenocarcinoma, independent of BMI. Cancer risk was not substantially mediated through gastroesophageal reflux-type symptoms, although symptoms may imperfectly measure reflux severity. Given abdominal obesity is more common among males, these findings suggest that increases in obesity may disproportionately increase the risk of esophageal adenocarcinoma in males.
食管腺癌的发病率正在迅速上升。体重指数(BMI)是一个危险因素,但其分布情况并不能反映该癌症的人口统计学分布(白人男性中的发病率最高)。腹部肥胖模式可能解释了这种不一致性,但迄今为止尚无相关研究。
在凯撒医疗集团多阶段健康检查队列的206,974名成员中进行巢式病例对照研究;研究对象接受了详细问卷、包括BMI和人体测量的标准化检查,并利用登记数据对食管癌和贲门癌进行随访。
共检测到101例新发食管腺癌、105例贲门腺癌和144例食管鳞状细胞癌(所有病例均有BMI数据;部分病例有腹部测量数据)。腹径增加与食管腺癌风险增加密切相关[比值比(OR)为3.47;95%置信区间(95%CI)为1.29 - 9.33;腹径≥25 cm与<20 cm相比]。对BMI进行校正并未减弱这种关联(校正BMI后的OR为4.78;95%CI为1.14 - 20.11)。对胃食管反流型症状进行校正也未减弱这种关联,尽管反流型症状分别与腹径和癌症风险相关。腹径与贲门腺癌风险(OR为1.28;95%CI为0.38 - 4.25;腹径≥25 cm与<20 cm相比)或食管鳞状细胞癌风险(OR为0.78;95%CI为0.32 - 1.92)无关。
腹径增加与食管腺癌风险增加相关,且独立于BMI。癌症风险并非主要通过胃食管反流型症状介导,尽管症状可能无法完美衡量反流严重程度。鉴于腹部肥胖在男性中更为常见,这些发现表明肥胖增加可能会使男性患食管腺癌的风险不成比例地增加。