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Higher body mass index is associated with an increased risk of multiplicity in surveillance colonoscopy within 5 years

Title
Higher body mass index is associated with an increased risk of multiplicity in surveillance colonoscopy within 5 years
Author
은창수
Keywords
COLORECTAL ADENOMAS; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; COLON-CANCER; ADIPOSE-TISSUE; WEIGHT CHANGE; REDUCED RISK; OBESITY; METAANALYSIS; RECURRENCE; POLYPS
Issue Date
2017-10
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Citation
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, v. 7, Article no. 14239
Abstract
We aimed to evaluate whether obesity was associated with a certain clinicopathologic characteristics of metachronous CRA. This retrospective longitudinal cohort study included 2,904 subjects who had at least one resected CRA at index colonoscopy and who subsequently underwent one or more surveillance colonoscopies within 5 years. Of the 2,904 subjects, 60.9% (n = 1,769) were normal, 35.8% (n = 1,040) were overweight, and 3.3% (n = 95) were obese. Patients with any metachronous CRA were 53.7% (n = 1,559). In multivariate analyses, higher BMI at index colonoscopy was significantly associated with any metachronous CRA (overweight, OR = 1.07; obese, OR = 1.82; p for trend = 0.049). Regarding the multiplicity, the ORs of >= 3, >= 4 and >= 5 metachronous CRAs significantly increased as index BMI increased (p for trend < 0.001, = 0.007 and = 0.004, respectively). In negative binomial regression regarding the incidence for total number of metachronous CRA, the higher BMI the subject has at the time of index colonoscopy, the more metachronous CRAs the subject will have at the surveillance colonoscopy (p for trend = 0.016). Higher index BMI was significantly associated with the risk of multiple metachronous CRAs on surveillance colonoscopy within 5 years.
URI
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-14163-9https://repository.hanyang.ac.kr/handle/20.500.11754/115792
ISSN
2045-2322
DOI
10.1038/s41598-017-14163-9
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COLLEGE OF MEDICINE[S](의과대학) > MEDICINE(의학과) > Articles
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