Literature DB >> 17868722

Association of obesity with tumor characteristics and treatment failure of prostate cancer in African-American and European American men.

E Spangler1, C M Zeigler-Johnson, M Coomes, S B Malkowicz, A Wein, T R Rebbeck.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The impact of body mass index on tumor characteristics and treatment failure in prostate cancer is not well understood in diverse ethnic groups. We evaluated the effect of body mass index in African-American and European American patients from a radical prostatectomy cohort between 1995 and 2004 with regard to tumor histopathological characteristics and biochemical relapse-free survival.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 924 patients were studied to evaluate whether obese men (body mass index greater than 30) had different preoperative and postoperative tumor characteristics or biochemical relapse-free survival compared to nonobese men. There were 784 European American and 140 African-American patients analyzed using failure time models, adjusted for age, preoperative prostate specific antigen, tumor stage and race.
RESULTS: Mean and median followup was 42 and 36 months, respectively. African-American men were significantly more obese than European American men. Mean body mass index was 29.0 in African-American and 28.1 in European American men (p = 0.003). African-American men (OR 2.30, 95% CI 1.04-5.1) were more likely to have higher tumor stage on final pathology. Obesity was a risk factor for biochemical failure in African-American men (adjusted hazard ratio 5.49, 95% CI 2.16-13.9) but not in European American men (HR 1.41, 95% CI 0.96-2.08), and this difference was statistically significant (p value for interaction 0.036).
CONCLUSIONS: Obesity is associated with poorer tumor prognostic characteristics and decreased biochemical relapse-free survival, particularly in African-American men. These data suggest that obesity may in part explain the poorer prostate cancer prognosis seen in African-American men compared to other racial and ethnic groups.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17868722     DOI: 10.1016/j.juro.2007.07.021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Urol        ISSN: 0022-5347            Impact factor:   7.450


  31 in total

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2.  The Association of Diabetes and Obesity With Prostate Cancer Progression: HCaP-NC.

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3.  Obesity has multifaceted impact on biochemical recurrence of prostate cancer: a dose-response meta-analysis of 36,927 patients.

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4.  Obesity at Diagnosis and Prostate Cancer Prognosis and Recurrence Risk Following Primary Treatment by Radical Prostatectomy.

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5.  Racial differences in adipose tissue distribution and risk of aggressive prostate cancer among men undergoing radiotherapy.

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6.  The association of weight change in young adulthood and smoking status with risk of prostate cancer recurrence.

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10.  Genetic variation in adiponectin (ADIPOQ) and the type 1 receptor (ADIPOR1), obesity and prostate cancer in African Americans.

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