University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Huntsman Cancer Institute, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
BMC Cancer. 2023 Apr 3;23(1):300. doi: 10.1186/s12885-023-10695-8.
Physical activity and BMI have been individually associated with cancer survivorship but have not yet been studied in combinations in colorectal cancer patients. Here, we investigate individual and combined associations of physical activity and BMI groups with colorectal cancer survival outcomes.
Self-reported physical activity levels (MET hrs/wk) were assessed using an adapted version of the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) at baseline in 931 patients with stage I-III colorectal cancer and classified into 'highly active' and'not-highly active'(≥ / < 18 MET hrs/wk). BMI (kg/m) was categorized into 'normal weight', 'overweight', and 'obese'. Patients were further classified into combined physical activity and BMI groups. Cox-proportional hazard models with Firth correction were computed to assess associations [hazard ratio (HR), 95% profile HR likelihood confidence interval (95% CI) between individual and combined physical activity and BMI groups with overall and disease-free survival in colorectal cancer patients.
'Not-highly active' compared to 'highly active' and 'overweight'/ 'obese' compared to 'normal weight' patients had a 40-50% increased risk of death or recurrence (HR: 1.41 (95% CI: 0.99-2.06), p = 0.03; HR: 1.49 (95% CI: 1.02-2.21) and HR: 1.51 (95% CI: 1.02-2.26), p = 0.04, respectively). 'Not-highly active' patients had worse disease-free survival outcomes, regardless of their BMI, compared to 'highly active/normal weight' patients. 'Not-highly active/obese' patients had a 3.66 times increased risk of death or recurrence compared to 'highly active/normal weight' patients (HR: 4.66 (95% CI: 1.75-9.10), p = 0.002). Lower activity thresholds yielded smaller effect sizes.
Physical activity and BMI were individually associated with disease-free survival among colorectal cancer patients. Physical activity seems to improve survival outcomes in patients regardless of their BMI.
身体活动和 BMI 单独与癌症生存有关,但尚未在结直肠癌患者中结合起来进行研究。在这里,我们研究身体活动和 BMI 组与结直肠癌生存结果的个体和联合关联。
在 931 名 I-III 期结直肠癌患者中,使用国际体力活动问卷(IPAQ)的改编版,在基线时评估自我报告的身体活动水平(MET 小时/周),并分为“高度活跃”和“不高度活跃”(≥/<18 MET 小时/周)。BMI(kg/m)分为“正常体重”、“超重”和“肥胖”。患者进一步分为结合身体活动和 BMI 组。使用 Firth 校正的 Cox 比例风险模型计算个体和联合身体活动和 BMI 组与结直肠癌患者总生存和无病生存的关联[风险比(HR),95%轮廓 HR 似然置信区间(95%CI)]。
与“高度活跃”相比,“不高度活跃”和“超重/肥胖”与“正常体重”患者的死亡或复发风险增加 40-50%(HR:1.41(95%CI:0.99-2.06),p=0.03;HR:1.49(95%CI:1.02-2.21)和 HR:1.51(95%CI:1.02-2.26),p=0.04)。与“高度活跃/正常体重”患者相比,“不高度活跃”患者无论 BMI 如何,无病生存结果均较差。与“高度活跃/正常体重”患者相比,“不高度活跃/肥胖”患者的死亡或复发风险增加 3.66 倍(HR:4.66(95%CI:1.75-9.10),p=0.002)。较低的活动阈值产生较小的效应量。
身体活动和 BMI 单独与结直肠癌患者的无病生存相关。身体活动似乎改善了无论 BMI 如何的患者的生存结果。