eISSN: 1897-4309
ISSN: 1428-2526
Contemporary Oncology/Współczesna Onkologia
Current issue Archive Manuscripts accepted About the journal Supplements Addendum Special Issues Editorial board Reviewers Abstracting and indexing Subscription Contact Instructions for authors Ethical standards and procedures
Editorial System
Submit your Manuscript
SCImago Journal & Country Rank
3/2018
vol. 22
 
Share:
Share:
Original paper

Overweight but not obesity is associated with decreased survival in rectal cancer

Leonardo S. Lino-Silva
,
Eduardo Aguilar-Cruz
,
Rosa A. Salcedo-Hernández
,
César Zepeda-Najar

Contemp Oncol (Pozn) 2018; 22 (3): 158-164
Online publish date: 2018/09/30
Article file
- Overweight.pdf  [0.23 MB]
Get citation
 
PlumX metrics:
 

Introduction

Rectal cancer along with colon cancer is a global problem, given that together they are the third most frequent cancer in incidence but the second in mortality, and this prevalence will increase in the next two decades as a result of aging and the expansion of populations in both developed and developing countries. The risk of rectal cancer varies from country to country and even within the same country, where subgroups may exist according to socioeconomic conditions or ethnicity. The risk also varies according to diet, lifestyle, and hereditary factors. Obesity has been associated with an increased risk of developing colon and rectal cancer [1] and has also been proposed as a factor that affects their prognosis [2]. However, the prognostic value of obesity in these patients is less established, with different studies describing associations in subsets of patients, and it has also been studied by mixing cases of both colon and rectum cancer. Considering the differences in the presentation and prognosis of colon carcinoma and rectal carcinoma, we consider it very important to study them separately.
On the other hand, Mexico has one of the largest (if not the largest) prevalence of obesity, increasing substantially since 1980 and affecting just over 30% of the population, and it is projected that by 2050 the proportion of obese men and women in Mexico will increase to 54% and 37%, respectively, with there being more obese people than overweight people [3].
In view of the great significance of both obesity and rectal carcinoma, this study aims to investigate the influence of overweight and/or obesity, at the time of diagnosis, on the clinicopathologic characteristics and the disease-specific survival rate of patients with rectal cancer in the Mexican population, where overweight and obesity predominates over normal weight. Our hypothesis is that overweight/obesity will be associated with lower survival rates compared to patients with normal weight.

Material and methods

Patients

The population consisted of patients who presented consecutively for the first time in our institution to receive care for rectal cancer during the period between 2009 and 2015. All patients older than 18 years who did not have a history of previous chemo or radiotherapy or another synchronous or metachronous tumour, or a history of a hereditary carcinoma, were included. Cases in stage IV were excluded because of their intrinsically worse prognosis and because their diagnosis and treatment protocols are very variegated. The final sample consisted of 304 cases. The sample was obtained for non-probabilistic methods; however, statistical power was verified with G*Power software (Universität Düsseldorf, Germany) to ensure the minimal group size reaching 80% of statistical power. Assuming that each group has at least 55 cases and searching for a moderate size effect (0.3), the statistical power was 87%.

Methods

The clinical variables were obtained from the patient’s electronic files and consisted of age, sex, use of chemotherapy, use of radiotherapy, type of surgical resection, surgery method, recurrence, follow-up time, and status at the last visit (dead or alive). Particularly, we define obesity as body mass index (BMI) equal to or greater than 30 kg/m2, overweight as BMI of 25 to 29.9 kg/m2, and normal weight at BMI < 25 kg/m2. Measurement of height and weight was performed during the study protocol of patients at the first or second visit and was carried out by the nursing staff or the doctor who conducted the interview. Clinical staging was based on computed tomography and endoscopic ultrasound and was performed following the TNM system in its seventh edition [4]. The pathological variables were obtained from the pathology archives of our institution. All specimens are analysed systematically following the protocol adopted by Quirke and validated in our institution [5, 6]. The 304 cases were divided into three groups for comparison based on the BMI, named normal weight (BMI < 25 kg/m2), overweight group (BMI of 25–29.9 kg/m2), and obesity (BMI > 30 kg/m2).

Follow-up and outcome

All patients underwent a follow-up program that included outpatient visits every 1 to 6 months for physical examination and carcinoembryonic antigen tests, as well as chest X-rays, abdominal CT, and colonoscopy every 1 to 3 years after the operation. Local recurrence was defined as the existence of tumour located within the initial surgical field and confirmed by histology. The time for calculating survival was determined as the date of surgery for rectal cancer until the last visit or event occurrence. The prognosis was assessed based on disease-specific survival (DSS), and death as a result of rectal cancer was treated as an event. Death resulting from causes other than rectal cancer was treated as censored. No patient was lost in the follow-up during the first two postoperative years.

Statistical analysis

The statistical analysis was made with SPSS ver. 23.0 (IBM, Armonk, New York, USA). Variables were tested for normality using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test; thereafter, numerical variables were summarised by median with interquartile range (IQR) or median with standard derivation (SD) as appropriate. Categorical variables were summarised by counts and percentages. Data were compared by a one-way ANOVA or Kruskal-Wallis test for numerical variables, and the 2 test for categorical variables. Survival analysis was performed with the Kaplan-Meier test, and differences of survival between groups were assessed with the log-rank test. Stratified analysis was performed by clinical stage, neo-adjuvant treatment, and adjuvant therapy use. Independent association of obesity was assessed with a Cox regression model controlled for factors associated with poor survival in univariate analysis. For all tests, significance was settled at a p-value < 0.05.

Ethic statement

This work was authorised by the Ethics and Research Committee of our institution, with a waiver of informed consent because of its retrospective nature (approval number: Rev/18/03). Likewise, the anonymity of the participants is guaranteed, and we conduct this work in accordance with the Helsinki declaration, with honesty, integrity, and impartiality.

Results

General characteristics of the population

Of the total population, 157 (51.7%) were men and 147 were women. The median age was 58 years (IQR 50–65), and the mean BMI was 26.03 ±4.06 kg/m2. At the time of presentation, 88.75% of the cases correspond to a stage III, 6.25% to stage II, and 5% were in stage I. As initial treatment 78.9% of the patients received neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy, reaching the pathological response complete 63 (26.3%) patients and downstaging 153 (63.7%). Regarding the pathological characteristics, 168 (55.3%) of the tumours were grade 1 and 77 (25.3%) grade 3, 71 (23.4%) cases had lymphatic vessel invasion, 31 (10.2%) venous vessel invasion, 57 (18.8%) had perineural invasion, and 126 (41.1%) lymph node metastasis.
Two hundred (65.8%) patients underwent abdominoperineal resection, 69 (22.7%) a low anterior resection, 25 (8.2%) an intersphincteric resection, and 10 (3.3%) cases an exenteration; of the total, 160 (52.6%) were performed by laparoscopy. Sixty-five per cent of the cases had a complete mesorectal resection and 18.1% an almost complete resection, amounting to a total of 83.1% of adequate resections of the mesorectum. 88.2% of the cases had a surgical resection with negative margin, while 11.8% had a positive resection margin (microscopic).

Characteristics of the groups

The characteristics of the groups are shown in Table 1; it can be seen that patients with obesity and overweight received a lower proportion of preoperative treatment because they also had a higher proportion of patients in stage II. On the other hand, overweight patients had a higher proportion of deaths and a lower baseline neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio, although with a statistical trend. The rest of the characteristics were similar among the groups.

Survival analysis

The median follow-up of the patients was 25 months (IQR 15–42), in which time recurrence was recorded in 70 (23%) patients, while 43 (14.1%) died. During the study period, 12 cases had liver recurrence; seven (58.3%) were in normal weight patients, whereas three (25%) were presented in patients with overweight and two (16.7%) in patients with obesity. Overweight patients had a lower DSS than patients with normal weight and with obesity (Fig. 1), with a mean survival of 69.5 months, compared to 86.4 months for the obesity group and 81.15 months for the normal weight group. The estimated five-year DSS was 51% for the overweight group, 81% for the normal group, and 82% for the group with obesity. A stratified analysis was performed per stage, showing that the difference in survival persisted (Fig. 2A, 2B). Also, a stratified analysis was performed using neoadjuvant treatment (Fig. 2C, 2D) and adjuvant treatment (Fig. 2E, 2F), and the difference persisted. Finally, a multivariate analysis was performed with a Cox regression, without demonstrating an independent association of BMI with DSS.

Discussion

We analysed the association of specific clinic-pathologic characteristics of rectal cancer and the prognostic influence of BMI categorised into normal weight, overweight, and obesity groups. Obesity and overweight groups were slightly more prone to present in earlier stages (stage I and II) and received neoadjuvant treatment in lower proportions. However, overweight patients died in a higher proportion than patients with obesity and normal weight.
In rectal cancer, a high BMI has been studied mainly as a risk factor or in surgical outcomes, and it is well demonstrated that surgical outcomes are very similar, establishing that surgical procedure does not strongly influence survival in patients with similar basal characteristics; if a difference in survival is found, it is probably due to the surgical procedure [7, 8].
A few studies have addressed the influence of BMI in the survival of rectal cancer patients. Chern et al. [7] showed in a series of 596 patients in stage I–III, non-statistical differences in DSS and overall survival (OS) between the obese (BMI > 30 kg/m2) and non-obese groups (BMI < 30 kg/m2). They found five-year DSS rates of 76% and 73% in patients without and with obesity, respectively (p = 0.75) and five-year OS rates of 84% and 90% in patients without and with obesity, respectively (p = 0.92). In addition, there was no statistically significant difference in local recurrence. Ballian et al. [9] did not find differences in DFS, but patients with BMI > 30 kg/m2 had significantly longer OS (93% vs. 80%, p = 0.05); however, multivariate analysis failed to show an independent association with OS. Gomez-Millán et al. [10] found that patients with BMI > 30 kg/m2 were associated with a higher DFS (95% vs. 53%; p < 0.005) than patients with BMI < 30 kg/m2. Seishima et al. [11] also found in a sample of 263 cases in Japan that the five-year DSS rates were 86.5 and 68.8 % in the BMI > 25 kg/m2 and BMI < 25 kg/m2 groups, respectively (p = 0.01), but this difference was not independent in multivariate analysis.
The series dividing the BMI into four groups did not find significant survival differences. Sun et al. [12] found in a series of 522 patients that the five-year OS rates did not differ among groups of patients with BMI of < 25 kg/m2, 25–30 kg/m2, and > 30 kg/m2 (p = 0.861), but they found that BMI > 25 kg/m2 was associated with poorer T downstaging and thus poor local control following neoadjuvant chemo-radiotherapy in Asian patients. You et al. [13] in a series of 1873 Asian patients found no statistical difference for DFS among four BMI groups in the upper rectum (p = 0.14) and lower rectum (p = 0.89), but the five-year DSS rates were 67.6%, 78.9%, 77.4%, and 91.6% in underweight, normal, overweight, and patients with obesity for upper rectal cancer, respectively; what is remarkable is that underweight and obese patients had a lower and higher five-year DSS rate, respectively, than the other groups. Denost et al. [14] found no differences in OS (five-year OS of 74%, 88%, 86%, and 88%, for underweight, normal, overweight, and patients with obesity, respectively, p = 0.724), but importantly (as in our study) they considered important surgical/pathologic parameters like quality of mesorectum. In another study, De Felice et al. [15] also did not find significant differences in OS (p = 0.792) or DFS (p = 0.807) in patients stratified by BMI in four groups.
A convincing explanation for the influence of adiposity in cancer prognosis is difficult to find, and more intriguing is the fact that patients with obesity have similar disease-specific survival compared to patients with normal weight. It is postulated that adiposity is characterised by mild chronic inflammation, where white adipose tissue and resident macrophages secrete adipokines and cytokines, including tumour necrosis factor, interleukin (IL)-1, and IL-6 [16]. People with mild obesity may have sufficient nutritional reserves, which afford a more efficient metabolic state and thus allow proper inflammatory and immune responses to be evoked due to surgical stress [17] or metabolic stress because of the cancer. Although differences in metabolic tissues and immune responses may partly explain the different recurrence patterns observed for the groups with different BMI classifications, more research on this topic is required before this association can be confirmed.
An alternative explanation is that some works showed that the liver steatosis substantially decreases the risk of developing liver metastases, in both clinical observations as well in an experimental setting; this happens probably due to the changes in the microenvironment [18, 19]. Obese patients have a high frequency of liver steatosis and steatohepatatis, and then the probability of liver metastasis could be lower than normal weight patients. However, this information is controversial [20]. In our series, from 12 cases with liver recurrence, seven (58.3%) were presented in normal weight patients, whereas three (25%) were presented in patients with overweight and two (16.7%) in patients with obesity.
A patient with rectal cancer with overweight or obesity should require early adequate nutrition intervention because their status definitively does not exclude malnutrition. The evaluation of the baseline nutritional status of patients with rectal cancer should be a part of routine clinical practice [21].
The limitations of our study are the relatively short median follow-up period of 25 months – the calculated (not observed) five-year survival in our study is unlikely to capture adequately death from rectal cancer, which remains a significant threat for at least five years after resection.

Conclusions

In conclusion, we found that patients with stage I–III rectal cancer in the overweight group showed a decreased survival rate, compared to groups with normal weight and with obesity, with the last two being similar. In addition, adiposity at the time of diagnosis could be a marker for patients who tolerated both preoperative chemo-radiotherapy and surgery, but there is an unsolved question as to why patients with “intermediate” adiposity (overweight but not obesity) had decreased survival.

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

1. Ning Y, Wang L, Giovannucci EL. A quantitative analysis of body mass index and colorectal cancer: findings from 56 observational studies. Obes Rev 2010; 11: 19-30.
2. Moghaddam AA, Woodward M, Huxley R. Obesity and risk of colorectal cancer: a meta-analysis of 31 studies with 70,000 events. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2007; 16: 2533-2547.
3. DiBonaventura MD, Meincke H, Le Lay A, Fournier J, Bakker E, Ehrenreich A. Obesity in Mexico: prevalence, comorbidities, associations with patient outcomes, and treatment experiences. Diabetes Metab Syndr Obes 2018; 11: 1-10.
4. Greene FL, Page DL, Fleming ID, Fritz AG, Balch CM, Haller DG, Morrow M. AJCC Cancer Staging Manual. Springer, New York 2013.
5. Quirke P, Steele R, Monson J, et al. Effect of the plane of surgery achieved on local recurrence in patients with operable rectal cancer: a prospective study using data from the MRC CR07 and NCIC-CTG CO16 randomised clinical trial. Lancet 2009; 373: 821-828.
6. Lino-Silva LS, Garcia-Gómez MA, Aguilar-Romero JM, Domínguez-Rodríguez JA, Salcedo-Hernández RA, Loaeza-Belmont R, Ruiz-García EB, Herrera-Gómez Á. Mesorectal pathologic assessment in two grades predicts accurately recurrence, positive circumferential margin, and correlates with survival. J Surg Oncol 2015; 112: 900-906.
7. Chern H, Chou J, Donkor C, et al. Effects of obesity in rectal cancer surgery. J Am Coll Surg 2010; 211: 55-60.
8. Balentine CJ, Wilks J, Robinson C, Marshall C, Anaya D, Albo D, Berger DH. Obesity increases wound complications in rectal cancer surgery. J Surg Res 2010; 163: 35-39.
9. Ballian N, Yamane B, Leverson G, Harms B, Heise CP, Foley EF, Kennedy GD. Body mass index does not affect postoperative morbidity and oncologic outcomes of total mesorectal excision for rectal adenocarcinoma. Ann Surg Oncol 2010; 17: 1606-1613.
10. Gomez-Millan J, Queipo MI, Del Mar Delgado M, et al. The impact of body mass index and nuclear beta-catenin on survival in locally advanced rectal cancer treated with preoperative radiochemotherapy. J Surg Oncol 2017; 115: 301-306.
11. Seishima R, Okabayashi K, Hasegawa H, Sugiyama D, Ishii Y, Tsuruta M, Takebayashi T, Kitagawa Y. Obesity was associated with a decreased postoperative recurrence of rectal cancer in a Japanese population. Surg Today 2014; 44: 2324-2331.
12. Sun Y, Xu Z, Lin H, Lu X, Huang Y, Huang S, Wang X, Chi P. Impact of body mass index on treatment outcome of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy in locally advanced rectal cancer. Eur J Surg Oncol 2017; 43: 1828-1834.
13. You JF, Tang R, Changchien CR, et al. Effect of body mass index on the outcome of patients with rectal cancer receiving curative anterior resection: disparity between the upper and lower rectum. Ann Surg 2009; 249: 783-787.
14. Denost Q, Quintane L, Buscail E, Martenot M, Laurent C, Rullier E. Short- and long-term impact of body mass index on laparoscopic rectal cancer surgery. Colorectal Dis 2013; 15: 463-469.
15. De Felice F, Musio D, Magnante AL, Bulzonetti N, Tombolini V. Excess of weight: is it a modifiable predictive and prognostic factor in locally advanced rectal cancer? Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci 2017; 21: 4606-4612.
16. Wei EK, Ma J, Pollak MN, Rifai N, Fuchs CS, Hankinson SE, Giovannucci E. C-peptide, insulin-like growth factor binding protein-1, glycosylated hemoglobin, and the risk of distal colorectal adenoma in women. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2006; 15: 750-755.
17. Mullen JT, Moorman DW, Davenport DL. The obesity paradox: body mass index and outcomes in patients undergoing nonbariatric general surgery. Ann Surg 2009; 250: 166-172.
18. Augustin G, Bruketa T, Korolija D, Milosevic M. Lower incidence of hepatic metastases of colorectal cancer in patients with chronic liver diseases: meta-analysis. Hepatogastroenterology 2013; 60: 1164-1168.
19. Murono K, Kitayama J, Tsuno NH, Nozawa H, Kawai K, Sunami E, Akahane M, Watanabe T. Hepatic steatosis is associated with lower incidence of liver metastasis from colorectal cancer. Int J Colorectal Dis 2013; 28: 1065-1072.
20. Pathak S, Pandanaboyana S, Daniels I, Smart N, Prasad KR. Obesity and colorectal liver metastases: Mechanisms and management. Surg Oncol 2016; 25: 246-251.
21. Ziętarska M, Krawczyk-Lipiec J, Kraj L, Zaucha R, Małgorzewicz S. Nutritional status assessment in colorectal cancer patients qualified to systemic treatment. Contemp Oncol (Pozn) 2017; 21: 157-161.

Address for correspondence

Leonardo S. Lino-Silva
National Cancer Institute
Av. San Fernando 22 col. Sección XVI
14080 Mexico City, Mexico
e-mail: saul.lino.sil@gmail.com

Submitted: 17.04.2018
Accepted: 15.05.2018
Copyright: © 2018 Termedia Sp. z o. o. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
Quick links
© 2024 Termedia Sp. z o.o.
Developed by Bentus.