Effects of dyslipidemia and obesity on high-risk prostate cancer
10.3969/j.issn.1009-8291.2024.11.013
- VernacularTitle:血脂代谢异常和肥胖患者发生高危前列腺癌的风险可能更高
- Author:
Fei ZHOU
1
;
Lei TANG
1
;
Yawei ZHAO
1
;
Qianyue LI
1
Author Information
1. Department of Urology, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Shihezi University/Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps Hospital, Urumqi 830092, China
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
prostate cancer;
obesity;
cholesterol;
lipid metabolism disorder
- From:
Journal of Modern Urology
2024;29(11):997-1003
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
[Objective] To explore the effects of dyslipidemia and obesity on high-risk prostate cancer, so as to provide reference for the prevention and treatment of prostate cancer. [Methods] The clinical data of 175 patients with prostate cancer admitted to our hospital during Jun.2016 and Jun.2022 were retrospectively analyzed, including 122 high-risk prostate cancer and 53 non-high-risk prostate cancer.The logistic regression analysis were conducted to identify independent risk factors affecting the occurrence of high-risk prostate cancer.Evaluate the predictive value and optimal cutoff value of risk factors such as age, cholesterol, body mass index (BMI), and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) for the occurrence of high-risk prostate cancer through receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves.Spearman analysis was used to investigate the correlation between Gleason scores and different risk factors. [Results] The age, BMI, cholesterol, PSA, incidence of obesity (BIM≥25) and high cholesterol in the high-risk prostate cancer group were all higher than those in the non-high-risk prostate cancer group (P<0.05). Multivariate logistic regression showed that age (OR=1.097, 95%CI: 1.005-1.198, P=0.039), obesity (OR=4.459, 95%CI: 1.305-15.239, P=0.017), PSA (OR=1.170, 95%CI: 1.069-1.280, P=0.001), and cholesterol (OR=5.544, 95%CI: 1.304-23.577, P=0.020) were risk factors for high-risk prostate cancer.The ROC curve showed that the optimal cutoff values for age, cholesterol, BMI, and PSA were 74.50 years (AUC: 0.748, 95%CI: 0.678-0.818), 3.70 mmol/L (AUC: 0.800, 95%CI: 0.731-0.870), 24.97 (AUC: 0.621, 95%CI: 0.532-0.711), and 18.67 ng/mL (AUC: 0.864, 95%CI: 0.813-0.916), respectively, and the combined prediction value of age, cholesterol, BMI, and PSA for high-risk prostate cancer was the highest (AUC: 0.931, 95%CI: 0.895-0.967). The age (r=0.464, P<0.001), BMI (r=0.222, P=0.003), cholesterol (r=0.501, P<0.001), and PSA (r=0.473, P<0.001) were positively correlated with Gleason by Spearman analysis. [Conclusion] Obesity, age, PSA, and cholesterol level are independent risk factors for high-risk prostate cancer.When the age is ≥74.50 years, cholesterol level is ≥3.70 mmol/L, BMI is ≥24.97, PSA level is ≥18.67 ng/mL, the possibility of developing high-risk prostate cancer is high.