Impact of visceral fat obesity (obesity disease) on short‐ and long‐term outcomes of laparoscopic gastrectomy in gastric cancer

Author:

Yamamoto Kei1ORCID,Oka Yoshio1,Takada Naoya1,Murao Shuhei1,Higashiguchi Masaya1,Takeda Takashi1,Fukata Tadafumi1,Noguchi Kozo1,Danno Katsuki1,Toyoda Yasuhiro1,Nakane Shigeru1,Yamamoto Hitoshi1,Saeki Mika2,Mito Takeshi2,Fujino Shiki3,Hirao Takafumi1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery Minoh City Hospital Osaka Japan

2. Department of Radiology Minoh City Hospital Osaka Japan

3. Department of Gastroenterology, Central Clinical School Monash University Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAs the incidence of obesity increases worldwide, laparoscopic gastrectomy (LG) in obese patients with gastric cancer is more common. It is unclear how visceral fat obesity (obesity disease [OD]) may influence short‐ and long‐term outcomes after LG.MethodsThis study included 170 gastric cancer patients who underwent curative LG at Minoh City Hospital from 2008 to 2020. Patients were classified based on preoperative body mass index (BMI) and visceral fat area (VFA): normal (N; n = 95), visceral fat accumulation alone (VF; n = 35), obesity with visceral fat accumulation (OD; n = 35), and obesity alone (n = 5).ResultsCompared with normal VFA, high preoperative VFA (≥100 cm2) was significantly associated with longer operation time, greater blood loss, more frequent postoperative complications, and longer hospital stay. Multivariate analysis revealed the following independent risk factors for postoperative intra‐abdominal infectious complications: Charlson Comorbidity Index ≥4 (odds ratio [OR]: 3.1, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.2–8.5), dissected lymph node area (D2) (OR: 3.0, 95% CI: 1.2–7.1), and preoperative VFA (≥100 cm2) (OR: 3.7, 95% CI: 1.6–8.8). Intraoperative and postoperative courses were comparable between groups VF and OD. The 3‐year overall survival rate was significantly worse in group VF (73.2%) compared with groups OD (96.7%) and N (96.7%) (p < .0001). Recurrence‐free survival and cancer‐specific survival were comparable between groups VF, OD, and N.ConclusionVisceral fat accumulation strongly predicted postoperative morbidity. Despite increased perioperative risk, OD did not negatively impact successful lymphadenectomy or survival following LG.

Publisher

Wiley

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