Abstract

Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) for visceral adipose tissue (VAT) assessment is used as an alternative to computed tomography (CT) for research purposes in apparently healthy and clinical populations. It is unknown whether DXA is comparable to CT among cancer survivors, especially in cases where VAT assessment may be affected by treatment history and side effects and become more challenging to assess, such as a history of surgical gastrointestinal resection and/or ascites. The purpose of this study was to determine the level of agreement between DXA and CT when assessing VAT area and volume among cancer survivors. One hundred Gastrointestinal and pancreatic cancer survivors underwent abdominal and pelvis CT and whole-body DXA within 48 hours. Bland-Altman analysis revealed that in women and men, DXA VAT-area estimates were larger and smaller, respectively, and was consistently smaller in estimates for VAT-volume. Correlations from linear regression analysis revealed statistically significant positive correlations between measurement methods. Overall, while DXA VAT estimates are highly correlated with CT VAT estimates, DXA estimates show substantial bias which indicates the two methods are not interchangeable in this population. Further research is warranted with a larger, more homogeneous sample to develop better estimates of the bias.

Highlights

  • Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) for visceral adipose tissue (VAT) assessment is used as an alternative to computed tomography (CT) for research purposes in apparently healthy and clinical populations

  • Examples of cases in which CT would be administered for VAT assessment beyond clinical purposes include research purposes among individuals who would not otherwise undergo CT for clinical purposes, research purposes when the timing of CT does not align with the timing of surveillance scans for clinical purposes, and research purposes when the scan is beyond the time-frame of surveillance scans, such as in survivorship studies

  • Significant differences were observed between men and women for height (p < 0.001), body weight (p < 0.001), waist circumference (p < 0.001), waist to hip ratio (p < 0.001), DXA body fat percentage (p < 0.001), DXA VAT area (p = 0.043), and CT VAT area (p = 0.003)

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Summary

Introduction

Dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) for visceral adipose tissue (VAT) assessment is used as an alternative to computed tomography (CT) for research purposes in apparently healthy and clinical populations. It is unknown whether DXA is comparable to CT among cancer survivors, especially in cases where VAT assessment may be affected by treatment history and side effects and become more challenging to assess, such as a history of surgical gastrointestinal resection and/or ascites. Since the new DXA software estimates both VAT area and volume, it would be useful to compare accuracy of DXA VAT area and volume estimates to CT VAT area and volume estimates

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