维生素D水平对乳腺癌相关淋巴水肿的影响。

Lymphology Pub Date : 2025-01-01
G D Karakilic, M A Selcuk
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究的目的是比较乳腺癌相关淋巴水肿(BCRL)、无淋巴水肿的乳腺癌(BC)和健康人群的血浆维生素D水平,以及临床变量、淋巴水肿严重程度分级和循环维生素D浓度之间的关系。该病例对照研究于2017年6月至2025年1月期间进行。该研究包括三个队列:诊断为乳腺癌相关淋巴水肿(BCRL)的个体的病例队列,无淋巴水肿的乳腺癌(BC)患者的疾病匹配对照队列(人口统计学上按年龄和性别与BCRL队列一致),以及按年龄和性别匹配的健康参与者的参考队列。研究共纳入603名女性个体,每组201人。赛后-豪厄尔测试分析显示,与BC组和对照组相比,BCRL组的维生素D水平较低
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Effect of Vitamin D Levels on Breast Cancer-Related Lymphedema.

The purpose of this study was to compare plasma vitamin D levels in patients with breast cancer-related lymphedema (BCRL), breast cancer (BC) without lymphedema, and healthy populations, as well as relationship between clinical variables, lymphedema severity grading, and circulating vitamin D concentrations. This Case-control study was conducted between June 2017 and January 2025. The study comprised three cohorts: a case cohort of individuals diagnosed with breast cancer-related lymphedema (BCRL), a disease-matched control cohort of breast cancer (BC) patients without lymphedema (demographically aligned with the BCRL cohort by age and sex), and a reference cohort of healthy participants matched by age and sex. A total of 603 female individuals were included in the study with 201 individuals in each group. Post-hoc Games-Howell test analyses revealed a lower level of Vitamin D in the BCRL group compared to the BC and control groups (p<0.001, p<0.001) and lower levels in the BC group compared to the control group (p<0.001). Vitamin D deficiency was statistically significantly more frequent in BCRL group than in BC and control groups (p:<0.001) and the proportion of those with normal vitamin D were statistically significantly more frequent in control group than in BCRL and BC and control groups (p:<0.001). Analysis revealed a strong, significant negative correlation between circulating vitamin D concentrations and advancing lymphedema stage (r: -0.578, p:<0.001). These observations imply that hypovitaminosis D may contribute to breast cancer pathogenesis and modulate the risk of treatment-associated morbidities, particularly lymphedema progression. Therefore, it is recommended that individuals diagnosed with BC or at risk of lymphedema have their vitamin D levels checked regularly and take supplements if necessary.

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