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Thématique :
- Cancer colorectal (CCR)
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Originalité :
Intermédiaire
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Doit faire évoluer notre pratique : |
Pas encore
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Nom du veilleur :
Docteur Pascal ARTRU
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Journal of clinical oncology (JCO)
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2015/11
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2015 Oct 26
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pii: JCO.2015.61.6441. [Epub ahead of print]
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Body Mass Index Is Prognostic in Metastatic Colorectal Cancer: Pooled Analysis of Patients From First-Line Clinical Trials in the ARCAD Database
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Renfro LA, Loupakis F, Adams RA, Seymour MT, Heinemann V, Schmoll HJ, Douillard JY, Hurwitz H, Fuchs CS, Diaz-Rubio E, Porschen R, Tournigand C, Chibaudel B, Falcone A, Tebbutt NC, Punt CJ, Hecht JR, Bokemeyer C, Van Cutsem E, Goldberg RM, Saltz LB, de Gramont A, Sargent DJ, Lenz HJ
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Body+Mass+Index+Is+Prognostic+in+Metastatic+Colorectal+Cancer%3A+Pooled+Analysis+of+Patients+From+First-Line+Clinical+Trials+in+the+ARCAD+Database.
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PURPOSE:
In recent retrospective analyses of early-stage colorectal cancer (CRC), low and high body mass index (BMI) scores were associated with worsened outcomes. Whether BMI is a prognostic or predictive factor in metastatic CRC (mCRC) is unclear.
PATIENTS AND METHODS:
Individual data from 21,149 patients enrolled onto 25 first-line mCRC trials during 1997 to 2012 were pooled. We assessed both prognostic and predictive effects of BMI on overall survival and progression-free survival, and we accounted for patient and tumor characteristics and therapy type (targeted v nontargeted).
RESULTS:
BMI was prognostic for overall survival (P < .001) and progression-free survival (P < .001), with an L-shaped pattern. That is, risk of progression and/or death was greatest for low BMI; risk decreased as BMI increased to approximately 28 kg/m2, and then it plateaued. Relative to obese patients, patients with a BMI of 18.5 kg/m2 had a 27% increased risk of having a PFS event (95% CI, 20% to 34%) and a 50% increased risk of death (95% CI, 43% to 56%). Low BMI was associated with poorer survival for men than women (interaction P < .001). BMI was not predictive of treatment effect.
CONCLUSION:
Low BMI is associated with an increased risk of progression and death among the patients enrolled on the mCRC trials, with no increased risk for elevated BMI, in contrast to the adjuvant setting. Possible explanations include negative effects related to cancer cachexia in patients with low BMI, increased drug delivery or selection bias in patients with high BMI, and potential for an interaction between BMI and molecular signaling pathways.
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Lien entre BMI et pronostic du CCRm en première ligne ?
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Un BMI bas est associé à un risque élevé de mauvaise SSP et SG ce qui n’est pas le cas pour les BMI élevés.
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Nombreux biais possible. Situation inverse en traitement adjuvant où les BMI élevés ont peut-être un risque de rechute supérieure.
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