Abstract

3591 Background: Adiponectin is a peptide hormone exclusively secreted by adipocytes that plays a role in immune regulation and in the host inflammatory response to cancer. We examined postsurgical adiponectin levels in relationship to tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs), clinicopathological features, vitamin D status, and patient survival in participants in a phase 3 trial of adjuvant chemotherapy. Methods: Plasma adiponectin and 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] were analyzed by radioimmunoassay in 600 patients with stage III colon carcinoma who received adjuvant FOLFOX +/- cetuximab. TIL densities were determined at light microscopy in routine histopathological sections. The associations between adiponectin and 25(OH)D, TILs, other factors were evaluated by Fisher’s Exact, Chi-squared, t-test, and Kruskal-Wallis tests where appropriate. The association between adiponectin or 25(OH)D with disease-free survival (DFS), time to recurrence (TTR) and overall survival (OS) were evaluated by multivariable Cox regression, adjusting for body mass index (BMI), race, T, N stage, performance status, tumor location, TILs, BRAF/KRAS, and mismatch repair status. Results: A statistically significant and inverse association between adiponectin level and BMI was observed with lower levels found with obesity (BMI > 30 kg/m2) [p < 0.001]. The level of adiponectin was significantly lower in men vs women (p < 0.001), in blacks vs whites or Asians (p < 0.032), and in patients with fewer regional lymph node metastases (N1 vs N2 stage, p = 0.011). A significantly lower level of adiponectin was found in patients whose tumors had high vs low TIL densities (p = 0.040), but was unrelated to 25(OH)D. Insufficiency of 25(OH)D ( < 30 ng/ml) was detected in 291 (49%) of patients and was not associated with TILs. By multivariable analysis, adiponectin was not associated significantly with patient DFS (HRadj= 0.98, 95% CI 0.74-1.29, padj= 0.88) nor with OS nor time-to-recurrence (TTR). TIL densities were significantly prognostic, but 25(OH)D was not (DFS: HRadj= 1.12, 95% CI 0.85-1.47, padj= 0.44). No significant interaction was observed for adiponectin with TILs for the association with DFS. Conclusions: Lower adiponectin levels were associated with significantly increased TIL densities in colon cancers, indicating an enhanced anti-tumor immune response. In contrast to TILs, adiponectin was not independently associated with patient outcome. Nearly one-half of stage III patients were vitamin D insufficient, although 25(OH)D was not prognostic.

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