作者
Isao Oze,Hidemi Ito,Yuriko N. Koyanagi,Sarah Krull Abe,Md. Shafiur Rahman,Md. Rashedul Islam,Eiko Saito,Prakash C. Gupta,Norie Sawada,Akiko Tamakoshi,Xiao‐Ou Shu,Ritsu Sakata,Reza Malekzadeh,Ichiro Tsuji,Jeongseon Kim,Chisato Nagata,San–Lin You,Sue K. Park,Jian‐Min Yuan,Myung‐Hee Shin,Sun‐Seog Kweon,Mangesh S. Pednekar,Shoichiro Tsugane,Takashi Kimura,Yu‐Tang Gao,Hui Cai,Akram Pourshams,Yukai Lu,Seiki Kanemura,Keiko Wada,Yumi Sugawara,Chien‐Jen Chen,Yu Chen,Aesun Shin,Renwei Wang,Yoon‐Ok Ahn,Min‐Ho Shin,Habibul Ahsan,Paolo Boffetta,Kee Seng Chia,You‐Lin Qiao,Nathaniel Rothman,Wei Zheng,Manami Inoue,Daehee Kang,Keitaro Matsuo
摘要
Abstract Body fatness is considered a probable risk factor for biliary tract cancer (BTC), whereas cholelithiasis is an established factor. Nevertheless, although obesity is an established risk factor for cholelithiasis, previous studies of the association of body mass index (BMI) and BTC did not take the effect of cholelithiasis fully into account. To better understand the effect of BMI on BTC, we conducted a pooled analysis using population‐based cohort studies in Asians. In total, 905 530 subjects from 21 cohort studies participating in the Asia Cohort Consortium were included. BMI was categorized into four groups: underweight (<18.5 kg/m 2 ); normal (18.5‐22.9 kg/m 2 ); overweight (23‐24.9 kg/m 2 ); and obese (25+ kg/m 2 ). The association between BMI and BTC incidence and mortality was assessed using hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) by Cox regression models with shared frailty. Mediation analysis was used to decompose the association into a direct and an indirect (mediated) effect. Compared to normal BMI, high BMI was associated with BTC mortality (HR 1.19 [CI 1.02‐1.38] for males, HR 1.30 [1.14‐1.49] for females). Cholelithiasis had significant interaction with BMI on BTC risk. BMI was associated with BTC risk directly and through cholelithiasis in females, whereas the association was unclear in males. When cholelithiasis was present, BMI was not associated with BTC death in either males or females. BMI was associated with BTC death among females without cholelithiasis. This study suggests BMI is associated with BTC mortality in Asians. Cholelithiasis appears to contribute to the association; and moreover, obesity appears to increase BTC risk without cholelithiasis.