4.4 Article

Obesity and Breast Cancer: Interaction or Interference with the Response to Therapy?

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CURRENT ONCOLOGY
卷 30, 期 1, 页码 1220-1231

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/curroncol30010094

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breast cancer; obesity; BMI; aromatase inhibitors

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This study aimed to identify a cut-off point of body mass index (BMI) that would have a significant prognostic impact on stage I-II BC patients receiving AI treatment. The results showed that a BMI cut-off >29 was associated with a deteriorating disease-free survival (DFS) in AI-treated BC patients, indicating that obesity is a risk factor for recurrence in breast cancer.
Background: Aromatase inhibitors (AI) are widely used for treating hormone-sensitive breast cancer (BC). Obesity, however, due to aromatase-mediated androgen conversion into estradiol in the peripheral adipose tissue, might impair AI inhibitory capacity. We aimed at identifying a cut-off of body mass index (BMI) with significant prognostic impact, in a cohort of stage I-II BC patients on systemic adjuvant therapy with AI. Methods: we retrospectively evaluated routinely collected baseline parameters. The optimal BMI cut-off affecting disease-free survival (DFS) in AI-treated BC patients was identified through maximally selected rank statistics; non-linear association between BMI and DFS in the AI cohort was assessed by hazard-ratio-smoothed curve analysis using BMI as continuous variable. The impact of the BMI cut-off on survival outcomes was estimated through Kaplan-Meier plots, with log-rank test and hazard ratio estimation comparing patient subgroups. Results: A total of 319 BC patients under adjuvant endocrine therapy and/or adjuvant chemotherapy were included. Curve-fitting analysis showed that for a BMI cut-off >29 in AI-treated BC patients (n = 172), DFS was increasingly deteriorating and that the impact of BMI on 2-year DFS identified a cut-off specific only for the cohort of postmenopausal BC patients under adjuvant therapy with AI. Conclusion: in radically resected hormone-sensitive BC patients undergoing neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy and treated with AI, obesity represents a risk factor for recurrence, with a significantly reduced 2-year DFS.

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