Department of Population Health Sciences, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 610 Walnut St, WARF Office Building, Suite 1007B, Madison, WI, 53726, USA.
University of Wisconsin Carbone Cancer Center, Madison, WI, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2024 Dec;11(6):3445-3456. doi: 10.1007/s40615-023-01797-x. Epub 2023 Sep 21.
Obesity may increase colorectal cancer (CRC) risk through mechanisms of increased inflammation. Although BMI is the most used adiposity indicator, it may less accurately measure adiposity in Black populations. Herein, we investigate associations between BMI, low albumin as an inflammation biomarker, and CRC risk in a racially diverse cohort.
Participant data arise from 71,141 participants of the Southern Community Cohort Study, including 724 incident CRC cases. Within the cohort, 69% are Black. Blood serum albumin concentrations, from samples taken at enrollment, were available for 235 cases and 567 controls. Controls matched by age, sex, and race were selected through incidence density sampling. Cox proportional hazards calculated BMI and CRC risk associations (hazard ratios [HRs]; 95% confidence intervals [CIs]. Conditional logistic regression calculated albumin and CRC risk associations (odds ratios [ORs]; 95%CIs).
Underweight, but not overweight or obese, compared to normal BMI was associated with increased CRC risk (HR:1.75, 95%CI:1.00-3.09). Each standard deviation increase of albumin was associated with decreased CRC risk, particularly for those who self-identified as non-Hispanic Black (OR: 0.56, 95%CI:0.34-0.91), or female (OR:0.54, 95%CI:0.30-0.98), but there was no evidence for interaction by these variables (p-interactions > 0.05). Moreover, albumin concentration was lower in Black than White participants. Mediation analysis suggested that the relation between albumin and CRC was not mediated by BMI.
Null associations of overweight/obesity with CRC risk demonstrates limited utility of BMI, especially among Black populations. Low albumin may indicate CRC risk. In Black individuals, albumin may better predict adiposity related risks than BMI.
肥胖可能通过增加炎症的机制增加结直肠癌(CRC)的风险。虽然 BMI 是最常用的肥胖指标,但它在黑人群体中可能不太准确地衡量肥胖程度。在此,我们在一个种族多样化的队列中研究了 BMI、低白蛋白作为炎症生物标志物与 CRC 风险之间的关联。
参与者数据来自南方社区队列研究的 71141 名参与者,包括 724 例 CRC 病例。该队列中 69%为黑人。在入组时采集的血清白蛋白浓度可用于 235 例病例和 567 例对照。通过发病率密度抽样选择年龄、性别和种族匹配的对照。Cox 比例风险计算 BMI 和 CRC 风险关联(风险比[HR];95%置信区间[CI])。条件逻辑回归计算白蛋白和 CRC 风险关联(比值比[OR];95%CI)。
与正常 BMI 相比,体重不足但不过重或肥胖与 CRC 风险增加相关(HR:1.75,95%CI:1.00-3.09)。白蛋白每增加一个标准差与 CRC 风险降低相关,尤其是那些自我认定为非西班牙裔黑人(OR:0.56,95%CI:0.34-0.91)或女性(OR:0.54,95%CI:0.30-0.98),但这些变量之间没有交互作用的证据(p 交互值>0.05)。此外,黑人群体参与者的白蛋白浓度低于白人群体。中介分析表明,白蛋白与 CRC 之间的关系不受 BMI 的影响。
超重/肥胖与 CRC 风险之间的关联为零,表明 BMI 的实用性有限,尤其是在黑人群体中。低白蛋白可能表明 CRC 风险。在黑人个体中,白蛋白可能比 BMI 更好地预测与肥胖相关的风险。