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Research Article

Nutritional Indexes as Predictors of Survival and Their Genomic Implications in Gastric Cancer Patients

, , , , , , ORCID Icon, , , & ORCID Icon show all
Pages 1429-1439 | Received 11 Feb 2020, Accepted 27 Jun 2020, Published online: 25 Jul 2020
 

Abstract

Gastric cancer is an aggressive malignancy with poor prognosis. Although obesity is a risk factor, an association between overweight and better survival has been reported. We explored the genomic implications of such association. Data from 940 patients were analyzed using Cox regression models and ROC curves to assess body mass index (BMI) and prognostic nutritional index (PNI) as predictors of survival. The exome sequencing of a random subset was analyzed to determine copy number variation (CNV) and single nucleotide variation (SNV), using Kruskal-Wallis and chi-square tests to evaluate their clinical implications. Overall survival was lower in patients with BMI ≤ 24.9 and PNI ≤ 29 (p < 0.001). BMI and survival were directly correlated (HR: 0.972, 95% CI: 0.953, 0.992; p-value < 0.007). A higher PNI correlated with improved survival (HR: 0.586, 95% CI: 0.429, 0.801; p-value <0.001). We found a PNI cutoff point of 41.00 for overall survival. Genomic analysis showed an association between lower BMI, less CNV events (p-value = 0.040) and loss of tumor suppressor genes (p-value = 0.021). BMI and PNI are independent factors for overall survival in gastric cancer, probably linked to variations in genomic intratumoral alterations.

Acknowledgments

We thank Clementina Castro, MS in Basic Biomedical Research, for the critical review of this manuscript, as well as Marco Andonegui, PhD and Jaime Barrera for the contributions in the style review and samples collection and processing.

Competing Interests

Authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Additional information

Funding

This study was supported by the National Institutes of Health [Grant R21ES027087, Prada] and by CONACYT (Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología – México) – FOSISS (Fondo Sectorial de Investigación en Salud y Seguridad Social SS/IMSS/ISSSTE-CONACYT) [FOSISS 289503 and A3-S-49533 Prada; A3-S-48281 Garcia-Cuellar].

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