Huang Lei, Wei Zhi-Jian, Li Tuan-Jie, Jiang Yu-Ming, Xu A-Man
Department of General Surgery, The First Affiliated Hospital of Anhui Medical University, Hefei, China.
Department of General Surgery, Nanfang Hospital of Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, China.
Oncotarget. 2017 Jul 12;8(40):68165-68179. doi: 10.18632/oncotarget.19251. eCollection 2017 Sep 15.
To prospectively investigate associations of presurgical body mass index (BMI) with clinicopathological factors and its prognostic significance in radically D2-resected patients with non-metastasized gastric cancer (GC) and Siewert type II/III adenocarcinoma of esophagogastric junction (AEG).
A large prospective cohort consisting of radically-resected GC and AEG patients was analyzed. Follow-up was successful in 671 out of 700 patients, who were categorized into underweight (BMI<18.5), normal-weight (BMI=18.5-22.9), overweight (BMI=23-24.9), and obese (BMI≥25) groups according to Asian standards. BMI-associated factors were explored using multivariable logistic regression with adjustment. Cancer-specific survival analyses were conducted applying both univariable and multivariable Cox regression methods.
Pre-operation, higher hemoglobin levels and smaller anemia proportions were observed in larger BMI groups. Higher BMI tended to be associated with higher neutrophil-lymphocyte ratios (NLRs). Patients with higher BMI had smaller tumors and more often stage I tumors, but longer surgical time and postsurgical stay. In multivariable analyses, higher hemoglobin levels, upper tumor location, poorer differentiation, and higher NLR were significantly associated with higher BMI. Overall, survival analyses revealed no significant role of BMI. However, in further stratifications after adjustment, compared to patients with normal BMI, obese patients had better survival in women, but worse in those with AEG; underweight was associated with reduced mortality risk in tumors differentiated well to moderately; overweight patients had increased death hazard when having thrombocytopenia.
Overall, preoperative BMI had limited prognostic significance in operated GC patients. However, under specific conditions (., female, AEG, good differentiation, and thrombocytopenia), BMI might indicate postoperative survival.
前瞻性研究术前体重指数(BMI)与非转移性胃癌(GC)及食管胃交界部Siewert II/III型腺癌(AEG)行D2根治性切除患者的临床病理因素的相关性及其预后意义。
分析一个由行根治性切除的GC和AEG患者组成的大型前瞻性队列。700例患者中有671例随访成功,根据亚洲标准将其分为体重过低(BMI<18.5)、正常体重(BMI=18.5-22.9)、超重(BMI=23-24.9)和肥胖(BMI≥25)组。采用多变量逻辑回归进行调整以探索与BMI相关的因素。应用单变量和多变量Cox回归方法进行癌症特异性生存分析。
术前,BMI较大的组血红蛋白水平较高,贫血比例较小。较高的BMI往往与较高的中性粒细胞与淋巴细胞比值(NLR)相关。BMI较高的患者肿瘤较小,I期肿瘤更为常见,但手术时间和术后住院时间较长。在多变量分析中,较高的血红蛋白水平、肿瘤位置较高、分化较差和较高的NLR与较高的BMI显著相关。总体而言,生存分析显示BMI无显著作用。然而,在调整后的进一步分层中,与BMI正常的患者相比,肥胖患者在女性中生存较好,但在AEG患者中生存较差;体重过低与高分化至中分化肿瘤的死亡风险降低相关;超重患者在出现血小板减少时死亡风险增加。
总体而言,术前BMI在接受手术的GC患者中预后意义有限。然而,在特定条件下(如女性、AEG、高分化和血小板减少),BMI可能提示术后生存情况。