Amini Neda, Margonis Georgios A, Buttner Stefan, Besharati Sepideh, Kim Yuhree, Gani Faiz, Sobhani Fatemeh, Kamel Ihab R, Pawlik Timothy M
Department of Surgery, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Department of Radiology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD.
Surgery. 2016 Jul;160(1):81-91. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2016.02.014. Epub 2016 Apr 5.
Obese patients may present with metabolic abnormalities that impact liver regeneration. We sought to assess the impact of body mass index (BMI) on liver volume regeneration index (RI) and kinetic growth rate (KGR) among patients undergoing liver resection.
The study included 102 patients undergoing major hepatectomy (≥3 segments) between July 2004 and April 2015 and stratified the patients by preoperative BMI, number of segments resected, and postoperative remnant liver volume (RLVp) to total liver volume ratio. Resected volume at operation was subtracted from total liver volume to calculate postoperative RLVp. RI was defined as the relative increase in RLV within 2 months [(RLV2m-RLVp)/RLVp] and 7 months [(RLV7m-RLVp)/RLVp] postoperatively; KGR was calculated as RI divided by time postoperatively (weeks).
Median patient age was 59.6 years (interquartile range 48.1-68.7 years), and most patients were men (52.0%). Liver failure was associated with the KGR at 2 months (KGR2m) and was greater among patients with KGR2m <2.5% per week (KGR <2.5%, 18.5% vs KGR ≥ 2.5%, 4.6%; P = .04). Although RI and KGR within 2 and 7 months postoperatively were similar among all patients, after excluding patients with fibrosis, obese (0.42% per week) and overweight patients (0.29% per week) had lesser KGR2-7m compared with patients of normal BMI (0.82% per week; P < .05). Additionally, risk of a major complication was greatest among obese patients (normal weight, 8.1% vs overweight, 12.9% vs obese, 29.4%; P = .04).
BMI did not impact liver regeneration during the first 2 months. In contrast, KGR per week between 2 and 7 months postoperatively was less among overweight and obese patients.
肥胖患者可能存在影响肝脏再生的代谢异常。我们旨在评估体重指数(BMI)对肝切除患者肝脏体积再生指数(RI)和动态生长率(KGR)的影响。
本研究纳入了2004年7月至2015年4月期间接受大肝切除术(≥3个肝段)的102例患者,并根据术前BMI、切除的肝段数量以及术后残余肝体积(RLVp)与全肝体积之比对患者进行分层。用全肝体积减去手术切除体积以计算术后RLVp。RI定义为术后2个月内([RLV2m - RLVp]/RLVp)和7个月内([RLV7m - RLVp]/RLVp)RLV的相对增加量;KGR计算为RI除以术后时间(周)。
患者年龄中位数为59.6岁(四分位间距48.1 - 68.7岁),大多数患者为男性(52.0%)。肝衰竭与2个月时的KGR(KGR2m)相关,且在KGR2m<每周2.5%的患者中更为常见(KGR<2.5%,18.5% 对比KGR≥=2.5%,4.6%;P = 0.04)。尽管所有患者术后2个月和7个月内的RI和KGR相似,但在排除纤维化患者后,肥胖患者(每周0.42%)和超重患者(每周0.29%)的KGR2 - 7m低于正常BMI患者(每周0.82%;P<0.05)。此外,肥胖患者发生严重并发症的风险最高(正常体重,8.1% 对比超重,12.9% 对比肥胖,29.4%;P = 0.04)。
BMI在最初2个月内不影响肝脏再生。相比之下,超重和肥胖患者术后2至7个月的每周KGR较低。