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体重指数对癌症大手术后结局的影响。

Influence of body mass index on outcomes after major resection for cancer.

作者信息

Zogg Cheryl K, Mungo Benedetto, Lidor Anne O, Stem Miloslawa, Rios Diaz Arturo J, Haider Adil H, Molena Daniela

机构信息

Center for Surgery and Public Health, Department of Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School and Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA; Department of Surgery, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.

Division of Thoracic Surgery, Department of Surgery, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD.

出版信息

Surgery. 2015 Aug;158(2):472-85. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2015.02.023. Epub 2015 May 23.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Evidence supporting worse outcomes among obese patients is inconsistent. This study examined associations between body mass index (BMI) and outcomes after major resection for cancer.

METHODS

Data from the 2005-2012 ACS-NSQIP were used to identify cancer patients (≥18 years) undergoing 1 of 6 major resections: lung surgery, esophagectomy, hepatectomy, gastrectomy, colectomy, or pancreatectomy. We used crude and multivariable regression to compare differences in 30-day mortality, serious and overall morbidity, duration of stay, and operative time among 3 BMI cohorts defined by the World Health Organization: normal versus underweight, overweight-obese I, and obese II-III. Propensity-scored secondary assessment and resection type-specific stratified analyses corroborated results.

RESULTS

A total of 529,955 patients met inclusion criteria; 32.06% had normal BMI, 3.45% were underweight, 32.52% overweight, and 17.76%, 7.51%, and 4.94% obese I-III, respectively. Risk-adjusted outcomes for underweight patients consistently were worse. Overweight-obese I fared similarly to patients with normal BMI but had greater odds of isolated complications. Obese II-III patients experienced only marginally increased odds of morbidity. Analyses among propensity-scored cohorts and stratified by cancer-resection type reported similar trends. Worse outcomes were observed among morbidly obese hepatectomy and pancreatectomy patients.

CONCLUSION

Evidence-based assessment of outcomes after major resection for cancer suggests that obese patients should be treated with the aim for optimal oncologic standards without being hindered by a misleading perception of prohibitively increased perioperative risk. Underweight and certain types of morbidly obese patients require targeted provision of appropriate care.

摘要

背景

支持肥胖患者预后较差的证据并不一致。本研究调查了体重指数(BMI)与癌症大手术后预后之间的关联。

方法

使用2005 - 2012年美国外科医师学会国家外科质量改进计划(ACS-NSQIP)的数据,确定接受六种大手术之一的癌症患者(≥18岁):肺手术、食管切除术、肝切除术、胃切除术、结肠切除术或胰腺切除术。我们使用粗回归和多变量回归来比较世界卫生组织定义的三个BMI队列中30天死亡率、严重和总体发病率、住院时间和手术时间的差异:正常与体重过轻、超重 - 肥胖I级和肥胖II - III级。倾向评分二次评估和特定切除类型的分层分析证实了结果。

结果

共有529,955名患者符合纳入标准;32.06%的患者BMI正常,3.45%体重过轻,32.52%超重,肥胖I - III级分别为17.76%、7.51%和4.94%。体重过轻患者的风险调整后预后始终较差。超重 - 肥胖I级患者的情况与BMI正常的患者相似,但发生孤立并发症的几率更高。肥胖II - III级患者的发病几率仅略有增加。倾向评分队列分析和按癌症切除类型分层的分析报告了类似趋势。在病态肥胖的肝切除术和胰腺切除术患者中观察到更差的预后。

结论

对癌症大手术后预后的循证评估表明,肥胖患者应在不受围手术期风险过高这一误导性观念阻碍的情况下,以达到最佳肿瘤学标准为目标进行治疗。体重过轻和某些类型的病态肥胖患者需要有针对性地提供适当护理。

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