Prognostic effect of sarcopenia in colorectal cancer recurrence

2021 
Abstract Objectives Nutritional status significantly influences postoperative prognosis in gastrointestinal cancers. It has been evaluated using sarcopenia before treatments such as surgery and chemotherapy, despite constant changes in nutritional status. We consider that nutritional status at cancer recurrence is one of the important factors that affect treatment choice and intensity. This study evaluated the prognostic effects of improved postoperative nutritional status for people with colorectal cancer recurrence. Methods We enrolled 209 participants with pathologically confirmed stage II or III colorectal cancer who underwent radical resection. Sarcopenia was diagnosed using the psoas muscle index obtained from analysis of three-dimensional computed tomographic images. We adopted the cutoff value that was proposed by Hamaguchi et al. (psoas muscle index Results Among the 209 participants, 81 (38.8%) had preoperative sarcopenia; this group had significantly lower overall survival than those without sarcopenia (P = 0.028). Colorectal cancer recurred in 48 participants. Of those 46, sarcopenia was evaluated at the time of recurrence; 19 of those 46 had preoperative sarcopenia. Preoperative sarcopenia did not affect the cancer recurrence ratio (sarcopenia, 23.5%; non-sarcopenia, 21.3%; P = 0.893). The sarcopenia-improvement group had higher overall survival than the sarcopenia-continuation group (P = 0.042). Conclusions Among participants with preoperative sarcopenia, the prognosis at the time of recurrence improved for the sarcopenia-improvement group compared to the sarcopenia-continuation group. In people with colorectal cancer and sarcopenia, nutritional management is important not only before but also after surgery.
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