Liu Xin, Song Hui, Li Chao, Hu Xiao, Li Chang, Lu Guo-Tao, Xiang Hongfei, Yu Qian
Department of Gastroenterology, Zigong Fourth People's Hospital, Zigong, 643000, China.
Tumor Immunology and Cytotherapy of Medical Research Center, the Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University, Qingdao, 266000, China.
BMC Cancer. 2025 Aug 20;25(1):1346. doi: 10.1186/s12885-025-14766-w.
While sarcopenia is associated with adverse pancreatic cancer (PC) outcomes, prospective evidence linking muscle health to PC risk remains limited. This study aimed to prospectively investigate the associations of grip strength and muscle mass with incident PC risk in the UK Biobank cohort.
Among 363,693 UK Biobank participants, grip strength (kg) and bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA)-derived muscle mass (weight-normalized) were measured. Cox proportional hazards models, adjusted for age, sex, lifestyle factors, and metabolic syndrome components, assessed PC risk over a median 13.7-year follow-up.
Higher muscle mass (HR = 0.86, 95% Confidential Interval [CI]:0.78-0.95) and grip strength (HR = 0.90, 95% CI:0.83-0.98) demonstrated linear inverse associations with PC risk showing sex-specific divergence: muscle mass reduction conferred stronger protection in men (HR = 0.84, 95% CI:0.74-0.96), whereas grip strength showed greater impact in women (HR = 0.84, 95% CI:0.74-0.96). Subgroup analyses revealed that improved grip strength reduced PC risk in diabetics (HR = 0.89, 95% CI:0.80-0.99), while obese individuals benefited from both enhanced grip strength (HR = 0.95, 95% CI:0.90-0.99) and muscle mass (HR = 0.88, 95% CI:0.82-0.94). Population-attributable fraction estimates suggest 5-12% of PC cases could be prevented through muscle health interventions.
These findings highlight an association between improved physical capability and reduced PC risk, supporting the adoption of sex-specific preventive strategies-prioritizing muscle mass augmentation in men and grip strength enhancement in women, particularly in high-risk metabolic subgroups. By characterizing sarcopenia as an independent risk factor, this study underscores the imperative to integrate muscle preservation into pancreatic cancer prevention paradigms.
虽然肌肉减少症与胰腺癌(PC)的不良预后相关,但将肌肉健康与PC风险联系起来的前瞻性证据仍然有限。本研究旨在前瞻性调查英国生物银行队列中握力和肌肉质量与PC发病风险的关联。
在363,693名英国生物银行参与者中,测量了握力(kg)和生物电阻抗分析(BIA)得出的肌肉质量(体重标准化)。Cox比例风险模型在对年龄、性别、生活方式因素和代谢综合征成分进行调整后,评估了中位13.7年随访期间的PC风险。
较高的肌肉质量(风险比[HR]=0.86,95%置信区间[CI]:0.78 - 0.95)和握力(HR = 0.90,95% CI:0.83 - 0.98)与PC风险呈线性负相关,且存在性别差异:肌肉质量减少对男性的保护作用更强(HR = 0.84,95% CI:0.74 - 0.96),而握力对女性的影响更大(HR = 0.84,95% CI:0.74 - 0.96)。亚组分析显示,握力改善可降低糖尿病患者的PC风险(HR = 0.89,95% CI:(此处原文有误,应为0.80 - 0.99)),而肥胖个体则从握力增强(HR = 0.95,95% CI:0.90 - 0.99)和肌肉质量增加(HR = 0.88,95% CI:0.82 - 0.94)中均获益。人群归因分数估计表明,通过肌肉健康干预可预防5% - 12%的PC病例。
这些发现凸显了身体能力改善与PC风险降低之间的关联,支持采用针对性别的预防策略——优先增加男性的肌肉质量和增强女性的握力,尤其是在高风险代谢亚组中。通过将肌肉减少症确定为独立风险因素,本研究强调了将肌肉保护纳入胰腺癌预防模式的必要性。