Abstract

327 Background: The prevalence of obesity (Body Mass Index>30kg/m^2) is rising in the western world and is a risk factor for gastrointestinal malignancy. It is considered a risk factor for poor surgical outcomes including impaired wound healing and venous thromboembolism. Dysphagia is a late sign of esophageal cancer and is associated with pre-operative malnutrition and weight loss. However, the true impact of obesity on outcomes after esophagectomy is controversial. This analysis investigates the impact of pre-operative obesity on outcomes following esophagectomy for esophageal cancer. Methods: All patients with recorded pre-treatment BMI, who underwent surgery from January 2005 to June 2022 at a single tertiary, specialist cancer centre in the United Kingdom (UK), were included in this study. Demographic details including BMI and tumour staging (TNM classification) were collected, as well as total length of inpatient and critical care admission (LOS), 30- and 90- day mortality. Statistical analyses were performed on the R platform. Results: A total of 401 patients (348 male, 53 female) underwent resectional surgery for esophageal cancer; 132 (32.9%) were of normal BMI (18.5-24.9kg/m^2), 162 (40.1%) were overweight (BMI of 25-29.9kg/m^2), and 108 (26.9%) were obese (BMI>30kg/m^2). The mean BMI for obese patients was 33.6kg/m^2 and mean age was 62.5 years in this cohort. Laparoscopic Ivor-Lewis esophagectomy was the commonest procedure performed on obese patients (57/108, 52.3%). When all patients were categorised into healthy BMI, overweight or obese cohorts, there was no statistically significant difference in post-operative complications at Clavien-Dindo grade II or lower, (p=0.500) or grade IIIa or higher (p=0.201). Furthermore, there was no statistically significant difference in total inpatient LOS (p=0.503), length of critical care admission (p=0.358), 30-day (p=0.836) or 90-day mortality (p=0.691). Conclusions: Obesity is not significantly associated with increased risk of postoperative complications, LOS, 30- or 90-day mortality in patients undergoing esophagectomy for cancer. The increasing uptake of minimally invasive surgery for esophageal cancer resections may also be associated with favourable surgical outcomes being achieved in patients with BMI>30kg/m^2.

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