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Published in: World Journal of Urology 5/2019

01-05-2019 | Original Article

The relationship between body-mass index, physical activity, and pathologic and clinical outcomes after radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer

Authors: Michel Wissing, Simone Chevalier, Ginette McKercher, Claudie Laprise, Saro Aprikian, Ana O’Flaherty, Eleonora Scarlata, Fred Saad, Michel Carmel, Louis Lacombe, Fadi Brimo, Mathieu Latour, Nadia Ekindi-Ndongo, Bernard Têtu, Armen Aprikian

Published in: World Journal of Urology | Issue 5/2019

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Abstract

Purpose

We evaluated whether an increased body-mass index (BMI) and decreased physical activity increase the risk of locally advanced or high-risk prostate cancer (PCa) at radical prostatectomy (RP), and treatment failure after surgery.

Methods

Data were collected from the PROCURE Biobank, a prospective cohort of patients with localized PCa undergoing RP in four academic centers in Québec between 2006 and 2013. Treatment failure was defined as biochemical recurrence and/or initiation of secondary, non-adjuvant therapy, and analyzed using the Kaplan–Meier method, log-rank tests, and Cox proportional-hazards models. Uni- and multivariate (ordered) logistic regression was used for time-independent variables.

Results

1813 patients were included. Median follow-up time was 69 months. Patients who reported a lower BMI were generally older, of Asian descent, and physically more active (p < 0.05). Younger, black, and overweight/obese patients reported less physical activity (p < 0.05). In multivariate analyses, a higher BMI increased the risk for locally advanced, high-risk PCa (defined as a pT3, N1 and/or Gleason 8–10 tumor; odds ratio 1.33, p < 0.001), but increased physical activity did not predict high-risk disease (odds ratio 0.84, p = 0.39). Patients with a higher BMI also had a larger prostate at surgery (odds ratio 1.13, p = 0.03). BMI and physical activity were not associated with positive surgical margins or time to treatment failure (p > 0.05).

Conclusions

BMI was an independent predictor for locally advanced, high-risk disease in this cohort of PCa patients undergoing RP, but was unrelated to treatment failure. Physical activity was not related to locally advanced, high-risk PCa or treatment failure.
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Metadata
Title
The relationship between body-mass index, physical activity, and pathologic and clinical outcomes after radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer
Authors
Michel Wissing
Simone Chevalier
Ginette McKercher
Claudie Laprise
Saro Aprikian
Ana O’Flaherty
Eleonora Scarlata
Fred Saad
Michel Carmel
Louis Lacombe
Fadi Brimo
Mathieu Latour
Nadia Ekindi-Ndongo
Bernard Têtu
Armen Aprikian
Publication date
01-05-2019
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
World Journal of Urology / Issue 5/2019
Print ISSN: 0724-4983
Electronic ISSN: 1433-8726
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00345-018-2457-6

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