Bachmann Jeannine, Heiligensetzer Mathias, Krakowski-Roosen Holger, Büchler Markus W, Friess Helmut, Martignoni Marc E
Department of Surgery, Klinikum rechts der Isar, Technische Universität München, Ismaningerstrasse 22, 81675 Munich, Germany.
J Gastrointest Surg. 2008 Jul;12(7):1193-201. doi: 10.1007/s11605-008-0505-z. Epub 2008 Mar 18.
Pancreatic cancer is the fourth leading cause of cancer-related death in Western countries with a poor prognosis (5-year survival rates, 25% in patients after tumor resection with adjuvant treatment; overall, the 5-year survival rate is about 4%; Jemal et al., CA Cancer J Clin, 55:10-30, 2005). Many patients develop a cachectic status during the progression of the disease, and this syndrome accounts for up to 80% of deaths in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer. Remarkably, there are only a few data available on the impact of cachexia in patients with pancreatic cancer scheduled for tumor resection.
Therefore, in this study, 227 consecutive patients with ductal adenocarcinoma of the pancreas were documented over an 18-month period regarding the prevalence of cachexia and its influence on perioperative morbidity and mortality with a special interest to postoperative weight gain and survival in a prospectively designed database and followed up.
In 40.5% of the patients, cachexia was already present at the time of operation. The cachectic patients did present in a worse nutritional status, represented by lower protein, albumins, and hemoglobin levels. Despite no significant differences in tumor size, lymph node status, and CA19-9 levels, the resection rate in patients with cachexia was reduced (77.8% vs. 48.9%) due to a higher rate of metastatic disease in patients with cachexia. The morbidity and in-hospital mortality revealed no significant difference. However, patients with and without cachexia lost weight after operation, and the weight gain started not until 6 months after operation. The survival in patients with cachexia was significantly reduced in patients undergoing tumor resection as well as in palliative treated patients.
Cachexia has a significant impact on survival and performance status in palliative patients as well as in patients operated for pancreatic cancer. But tumor-related cachexia is not necessarily dependent on tumor size or load and that metastatic dedifferentiation of the tumor might be a critical step in the development of tumor-associated cachexia.
在西方国家,胰腺癌是癌症相关死亡的第四大主要原因,预后较差(5年生存率:接受辅助治疗的肿瘤切除术后患者为25%;总体而言,5年生存率约为4%;Jemal等人,《CA:癌症杂志临床版》,55:10 - 30,2005)。许多患者在疾病进展过程中会出现恶病质状态,该综合征占晚期胰腺癌患者死亡人数的80%。值得注意的是,关于恶病质对计划进行肿瘤切除的胰腺癌患者的影响,现有数据很少。
因此,在本研究中,在一个前瞻性设计的数据库中,对连续227例胰腺导管腺癌患者进行了为期18个月的记录,内容包括恶病质的患病率及其对围手术期发病率和死亡率的影响,特别关注术后体重增加和生存率,并进行随访。
40.5%的患者在手术时已存在恶病质。恶病质患者的营养状况较差,表现为蛋白质、白蛋白和血红蛋白水平较低。尽管在肿瘤大小、淋巴结状态和CA19 - 9水平方面无显著差异,但由于恶病质患者中转移性疾病发生率较高,恶病质患者的切除率降低(77.8%对48.9%)。发病率和住院死亡率无显著差异。然而,有和没有恶病质的患者术后均体重减轻,且直到术后6个月才开始体重增加。接受肿瘤切除的患者以及接受姑息治疗的患者中,恶病质患者的生存率显著降低。
恶病质对姑息治疗患者以及接受胰腺癌手术的患者的生存率和身体状况有显著影响。但肿瘤相关性恶病质不一定取决于肿瘤大小或负荷,肿瘤的转移性去分化可能是肿瘤相关性恶病质发展的关键步骤。