Fowke Jay H, Koyama Tatsuki, Fadare Oluwole, Clark Peter E
Departments of Medicine and Urologic Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, United States of America.
Department of Biostatistics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2016 Jun 23;11(6):e0156918. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0156918. eCollection 2016.
BPH is a common disease associated with age and obesity. However, the biological pathways between obesity and BPH are unknown. Our objective was to investigate biomarkers of systemic and prostate tissue inflammation as potential mediators of the obesity and BPH association.
Participants included 191 men without prostate cancer at prostate biopsy. Trained staff measured weight, height, waist and hip circumferences, and body composition by bioelectric impedance analysis. Systemic inflammation was estimated by serum IL-6, IL-1β, IL-8, and TNF-α; and by urinary prostaglandin E2 metabolite (PGE-M), F2-isoprostane (F2iP), and F2-isoprostane metabolite (F2iP-M) levels. Prostate tissue was scored for grade, aggressiveness, extent, and location of inflammatory regions, and also stained for CD3 and CD20 positive lymphocytes. Analyses investigated the association between multiple body composition scales, systemic inflammation, and prostate tissue inflammation against BPH outcomes, including prostate size at ultrasound and LUTS severity by the AUA-symptom index (AUA-SI).
Prostate size was significantly associated with all obesity measures. For example, prostate volume was 5.5 to 9.0 mls larger comparing men in the 25th vs. 75th percentile of % body fat, fat mass (kg) or lean mass (kg). However, prostate size was not associated with proinflammatory cytokines, PGE-M, F2iP, F2iP-M, prostate tissue inflammation scores or immune cell infiltration. In contrast, the severity of prostate tissue inflammation was significantly associated with LUTS, such that there was a 7 point difference in AUA-SI between men with mild vs. severe inflammation (p = 0.004). Additionally, men with a greater waist-hip ratio (WHR) were significantly more likely to have severe prostate tissue inflammation (p = 0.02), and a high WHR was significantly associated with moderate/severe LUTS (OR = 2.56, p = 0.03) among those participants with prostate tissue inflammation.
The WHR, an estimate of centralized obesity, was associated with the severity of inflammatory regions in prostate tissue and with LUTS severity among men with inflammation. Our results suggest centralized obesity advances prostate tissue inflammation to increase LUTS severity. Clinically targeting centralized fat deposition may reduce LUTS severity. Mechanistically, the lack of a clear relationship between systemic inflammatory or oxidative stress markers in blood or urine with prostate size or LUTS suggests pathways other than systemic inflammatory signaling may link body adiposity to BPH outcomes.
良性前列腺增生(BPH)是一种与年龄和肥胖相关的常见疾病。然而,肥胖与BPH之间的生物学途径尚不清楚。我们的目的是研究全身和前列腺组织炎症的生物标志物,作为肥胖与BPH关联的潜在介质。
参与者包括191名在前列腺活检时未患前列腺癌的男性。训练有素的工作人员通过生物电阻抗分析测量体重、身高、腰围和臀围以及身体成分。通过血清白细胞介素-6(IL-6)、白细胞介素-1β(IL-1β)、白细胞介素-8(IL-8)和肿瘤坏死因子-α(TNF-α);以及尿前列腺素E2代谢物(PGE-M)、F2-异前列腺素(F2iP)和F2-异前列腺素代谢物(F2iP-M)水平来评估全身炎症。对前列腺组织的炎症区域的分级、侵袭性、范围和位置进行评分,并对CD3和CD20阳性淋巴细胞进行染色。分析研究了多种身体成分指标、全身炎症和前列腺组织炎症与BPH结局之间的关联,包括超声检查时的前列腺大小和美国泌尿外科学会症状指数(AUA-SI)评估的下尿路症状(LUTS)严重程度。
前列腺大小与所有肥胖指标均显著相关。例如,将体脂百分比、脂肪量(kg)或瘦体重(kg)处于第25百分位数与第75百分位数的男性进行比较,前列腺体积要大5.5至9.0毫升。然而,前列腺大小与促炎细胞因子、PGE-M、F2iP、F2iP-M、前列腺组织炎症评分或免疫细胞浸润无关。相比之下,前列腺组织炎症的严重程度与LUTS显著相关,轻度炎症与重度炎症男性的AUA-SI相差7分(p = 0.004)。此外,腰臀比(WHR)较高的男性发生严重前列腺组织炎症的可能性显著更高(p = 0.02),在那些有前列腺组织炎症的参与者中,高WHR与中度/重度LUTS显著相关(比值比[OR]=2.56,p = 0.03)。
WHR(一种衡量中心性肥胖的指标)与前列腺组织炎症区域的严重程度以及有炎症男性的LUTS严重程度相关。我们的结果表明,中心性肥胖会加剧前列腺组织炎症,从而增加LUTS严重程度。临床上针对中心性脂肪沉积可能会降低LUTS严重程度。从机制上讲,血液或尿液中的全身炎症或氧化应激标志物与前列腺大小或LUTS之间缺乏明确关系,这表明除全身炎症信号传导途径外,可能还有其他途径将身体肥胖与BPH结局联系起来。