| Literature DB >> 27475805 |
Hannah Lennon1,2, Matthew Sperrin3, Ellena Badrick4,3, Andrew G Renehan4,3.
Abstract
There is a common perception that excess adiposity, commonly approximated by body mass index (BMI), is associated with reduced cancer survival. A number of studies have emerged challenging this by demonstrating that overweight and early obese states are associated with improved survival. This finding is termed the "obesity paradox" and is well recognized in the cardio-metabolic literature but less so in oncology. Here, we summarize the epidemiological findings related to the obesity paradox in cancer. Our review highlights that many observations of the obesity paradox in cancer reflect methodological mechanisms including the crudeness of BMI as an obesity measure, confounding, detection bias, reverse causality, and a specific form of the selection bias, known as collider bias. It is imperative for the oncologist to interpret the observation of the obesity paradox against the above methodological framework and avoid the misinterpretation that being obese might be "good" or "protective" for cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: Adiposity; BMI; Body mass index; Cancer; Cancer survival; Epidemiology; Excess weight; Mortality; Obesity; Overweight; Prognosis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27475805 PMCID: PMC4967417 DOI: 10.1007/s11912-016-0539-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Oncol Rep ISSN: 1523-3790 Impact factor: 5.075
Fig. 1An illustration of the obesity paradox. The vertical axis represents hazard ratio of mortality (log scale), compared with the baseline BMI of 22.5 kg/m2. The plot represents a population in which the obesity paradox is observed, since the hazard ratio is below 1 in the overweight and obese range. The 95 % confidence intervals are shown with dashed lines
Examples of studies demonstrating the obesity paradox in patients with cancer, where BMI was determined either pre-, peri-, or post-diagnosis of cancer
| Study | Time of BMI determination | Cancer | Number and country | BMI categories | Results | Adjusted for | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reichle et al. (2015) [ | Pre-diagnosis | Prostate ( |
| <18.5 | 1.28 (1.02–1.60) | Age at cancer diagnosis, sex, smoking status, primary location, stage | |
| Tsang et al. (2016) [ | Peri-diagnosis (date of receiving radiation therapy) | Distant metastases (bone, brain, others) with primary tumors (lung, breast, others) |
| ≤18.5 | 1.41 (1.26–1.58) | Age current, sex, performance status, primary tumor site, site of metastasis, multiple, onset of metastasis. EQD, chemotherapy, comorbidities, employment, alcohol, smoking, betel quid chewing, rural town | Alcohol, smoking, age, and comorbidities have a |
| Schlesinger et al. (2014) [ | Post-diagnosis (average 4 years after diagnosis) | Colorectal |
| 25 ≤ 25.0–29.9 | 2.12 (1.18–3.80) | Age current, sex, alcohol, smoking status, tumor location, family history of CRC, metastases, other cancers (initially) | Prospective cohort study then meta-analysis with 7565 CRC patients |
BMI body mass index, EQD equieffective dose (of radiotherapy), CRC colorectal cancer