Baik D, Sheng J, Schlaffer K, Friedenberg F K, Smith M S, Ehrlich A C
Department of Medicine.
Department of Medicine, University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Dis Esophagus. 2017 Sep 1;30(9):1-6. doi: 10.1093/dote/dox056.
Abdominal obesity is associated with gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and Barrett's esophagus (BE). Increased body mass index (BMI) and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) have been associated with BE. Abdominal diameter index (ADI, sagittal abdominal diameter divided by thigh circumference) was previously shown to be a more accurate predictor of incident cardiovascular disease compared to other measurements. Our aim is to examine whether abdominal diameter index was a more accurate predictor of prevalent BE compared to other anthropometric measurements. We conducted a case-control study of patients presenting to our institution. Our study population was consecutive Caucasian men with a known history of BE, and we recruited control patients who had GERD without BE. Both groups completed a questionnaire about demographics, smoking, and medications and underwent a series of anthropometric body measurements using standardized measuring tools. BMI, waist-to-hip ratio, and abdominal diameter index were calculated. Thirty-one BE patients and 27 control patients were recruited. The BE cohort were older and had a higher rate of hiatal hernia. The mean abdominal diameter index for patients with BE was 0.65 ± 0.07 and without BE was 0.60 ± 0.07 (p = 0.01). The predictive value of abdominal diameter index was analyzed using a receiver-operator characteristic (ROC) curve and was a more powerful predictor of BE than waist-to-hip ratio or BMI (AUROC = 0.70 vs. 0.60 vs. 0.52, respectively). Using a cut-point abdominal diameter index value of 0.60, abdominal diameter index had a sensitivity of 77.4% and a specificity of 63.0% for the presence of BE. When controlling for age, smoking status, and BMI, an abdominal diameter index ≥0.60 was a significant independent risk factor for BE (OR = 5.7, 95% CI = 1.29-25.4). In this pilot study, the abdominal diameter index appears to be a more powerful predictor of the presence of BE than BMI and waist-to-hip ratio and remained the only significant predictor of BE in multivariate analysis. We propose further validation of abdominal diameter index before inclusion in future prediction tools for BE.
腹型肥胖与胃食管反流病(GERD)及巴雷特食管(BE)相关。体重指数(BMI)增加及腰臀比(WHR)增大与BE相关。腹径指数(ADI,矢状腹径除以大腿围)先前已被证明与其他测量指标相比,是心血管疾病发病更准确的预测指标。我们的目的是研究与其他人体测量指标相比,腹径指数是否是BE患病率更准确的预测指标。我们对到本院就诊的患者进行了一项病例对照研究。我们的研究人群为有BE病史的连续白人男性,我们招募了患有GERD但无BE的对照患者。两组均完成了一份关于人口统计学、吸烟及用药情况的问卷,并使用标准化测量工具进行了一系列人体测量。计算了BMI、腰臀比及腹径指数。招募了31例BE患者和27例对照患者。BE队列年龄更大且食管裂孔疝发生率更高。BE患者的平均腹径指数为0.65±0.07,无BE患者为0.60±0.07(p = 0.01)。使用受试者工作特征(ROC)曲线分析腹径指数的预测价值,其对BE的预测能力比腰臀比或BMI更强(曲线下面积分别为0.70、0.60和0.52)。使用腹径指数切点值0.60时,腹径指数对BE存在情况的敏感性为77.4%,特异性为63.0%。在控制年龄、吸烟状态及BMI后,腹径指数≥0.60是BE的显著独立危险因素(比值比=5.7,95%置信区间=1.29 - 25.4)。在这项初步研究中,腹径指数似乎比BMI和腰臀比更能有力地预测BE的存在,并且在多变量分析中仍是BE唯一显著的预测指标。我们建议在将腹径指数纳入未来BE预测工具之前进一步验证。