Graduate Program in Nutrition, Health Sciences Centre, Federal University of Rio Grande Do Norte, Natal, RN, Brazil.
Graduate Program in Health Sciences, Health Sciences Centre, Federal University of Rio Grande Do Norte, Natal, RN, Brazil.
Support Care Cancer. 2023 Nov 28;31(12):728. doi: 10.1007/s00520-023-08173-9.
Sarcopenia and frailty are associated with mortality in older patients with gastrointestinal cancer. However, it is unclear if there is an additional risk when both are present. This study aimed to investigate the independent and overlapping of sarcopenia and frailty with mortality in this population.
A prospective cohort study including older patients (≥ 60 years old) with gastrointestinal cancer. Sarcopenia was defined by the EWGSP2 criteria: (i) low muscle strength (handgrip test), (ii) low muscle mass (skeletal muscle index), and/or low muscle quality (skeletal muscle radiodensity) by computed tomography. Frailty was defined according to Fried phenotype (at least three of the five components): (i) low muscle strength (handgrip test), (ii) unintentional weight loss, (iii) self-reported exhaustion, (iv) low physical activity, and (v) low gait speed. Cox proportional hazards model was used to assess overall survival rates and risk of mortality.
We evaluated 179 patients with gastrointestinal cancer [68.0 (61.0-75.0) years old; 45% women]. The prevalence of sarcopenia, frailty, and sarcopenia-frailty was 32.9% (n = 59), 59.2% (n = 106), and 24.6% (n = 44), respectively. The incidence of mortality was 27.9% (n = 50) over a 23-month (IQR, 10, 28) period. There was an association of sarcopenia (HR = 1.78, 95% CI 1.03-3.06) with mortality, but no association was found of frailty and the outcome. Sarcopenia-frailty was associated with the highest risk of mortality (HR = 2.23, 95% CI 1.27-3.92).
Sarcopenic-frail older patients with gastrointestinal cancer have a higher risk of mortality than those with sarcopenia or frailty alone, which reinforces the importance of assessing both conditions in oncology clinical care.
在老年胃肠道癌患者中,肌少症和衰弱与死亡率相关。然而,当两者同时存在时是否存在额外的风险尚不清楚。本研究旨在调查该人群中肌少症和衰弱与死亡率的独立和重叠关系。
这是一项前瞻性队列研究,纳入了老年(≥60 岁)胃肠道癌患者。肌少症的定义采用 EWGSP2 标准:(i)握力测试时肌肉力量低,(ii)骨骼肌指数低(肌肉质量低),和/或计算机断层扫描时骨骼肌密度低(肌肉质量低)。衰弱根据 Fried 表型定义(至少有五个指标中的三个):(i)握力测试时肌肉力量低,(ii)非故意体重减轻,(iii)自我报告的疲惫,(iv)体力活动低,和(v)步态速度低。使用 Cox 比例风险模型评估总生存率和死亡率风险。
我们评估了 179 例胃肠道癌患者[68.0(61.0-75.0)岁;45%为女性]。肌少症、衰弱和肌少症-衰弱的患病率分别为 32.9%(n=59)、59.2%(n=106)和 24.6%(n=44)。在 23 个月(IQR,10,28)的随访期间,死亡率为 27.9%(n=50)。肌少症与死亡率相关(HR=1.78,95%CI 1.03-3.06),但衰弱与结局无关。肌少症-衰弱与死亡率的相关性最高(HR=2.23,95%CI 1.27-3.92)。
与仅存在肌少症或衰弱的老年胃肠道癌患者相比,同时存在肌少症-衰弱的患者死亡率更高,这进一步强调了在肿瘤临床护理中评估这两种情况的重要性。