Guoqing Shi, Tianyu Gao, Peng Du, Jiwu Guo, Yan Dong, Jie Mao
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that general and central obesity are each linked to adverse outcomes in gastrointestinal cancers. However, their combined effect on gastrointestinal cancers surgery outcomes were less understood. This study aims to integrate both general and central obesity to examine the outcomes of gastric cancer surgery in different obesity patterns. We retrospectively analyzed 248 patients who underwent gastric cancer surgery between 2021 and 2023 in a single institute. The Inbody720 body composition analyzer measured body composition. We evaluated the relationship between obesity patterns - combining BMI with central obesity measures (waist circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, visceral fat area) - and postoperative complications and 30-day readmission. Central-only obesity were more likely to induce fistula (P = 0.025), while non-obesity was more likely to develop postoperative abdominal effusion (P = 0.049) and bleeding (P = 0.042). Central-only obesity was significantly associated with severe postoperative complications after adjustment for hypertension, diabetes, abdominal surgery history, preoperative albumin levels, age, sex, and surgical types. This remains significant even after adjusting for muscle mass. However, we did not find the same results for significant complications. Regarding 30-day readmission, there are no differences between different patterns of obesity. Central-only obesity is an independent risk factor for severe postoperative complications in gastric cancer, while a high BMI appears to be associated with a lower risk compared to non-obese patients, but not significant postoperative complications. The likelihood of readmission within 30 days post-surgery may not be related to the patient's pattern of obesity.
期刊介绍:
European Journal of Cancer Prevention aims to promote an increased awareness of all aspects of cancer prevention and to stimulate new ideas and innovations. The Journal has a wide-ranging scope, covering such aspects as descriptive and metabolic epidemiology, histopathology, genetics, biochemistry, molecular biology, microbiology, clinical medicine, intervention trials and public education, basic laboratory studies and special group studies. Although affiliated to a European organization, the journal addresses issues of international importance.