Research Interests

AHAndrew Hoover
Papers(1)
The impact of skeleta…
Institutions(1)
The University Of Kan…

Papers

The impact of skeletal muscle abnormalities on tolerance to adjuvant chemotherapy and radiation and outcome in patients with endometrial cancer

AbstractIntroductionSkeletal muscle abnormalities, such as low skeletal muscle mass, measured by skeletal muscle index (SMI), and low skeletal muscle quality, measured by skeletal muscle density (SMD), are associated with poor prognosis in cancer. There has been little investigation of their impact on tolerance to radiation therapy and overall outcome in gynaecologic cancers. We examined the effect of low SMI and SMD on treatment tolerance and survival outcomes in patients with endometrial cancer receiving pelvic radiation.MethodsStage IB‐IVA patients with endometrial cancer treated at one institution between 2007 and 2017 were reviewed. All patients received hysterectomy and pelvic radiation. SMI was based on the cross‐sectional area of skeletal muscle at the L3 vertebral body. SMD was expressed as the mean radiation attenuation in Hounsfield units (HUs) at the same vertebral level.ResultsSixty‐four patients met criteria for analysis. Forty‐four per cent had low SMI (<41 cm2/m2), 80% had low SMD (mean < 33 HU if BMI> 25 and mean < 41 HU if BMI < 25), and 33% had both. Patients with both features were less likely to complete planned chemotherapy (p = 0.01); this was consistent on multivariate analysis. Radiation treatments were well‐tolerated regardless of SMI or SMD. On survival analysis, having both low SMI and low SMD was associated with poorer outcomes compared with having either individual factor (p = 0.04).ConclusionLarge percentages of patients with endometrial cancer have low skeletal muscle mass and density. Low skeletal muscle measures predict for poor tolerance to chemotherapy in this patient population. Compliance with adjuvant radiation is high, regardless of SMI and SMD.

1Papers
Genital Neoplasms, FemaleEndometrial Neoplasms