PO.PR01.04 · 预防研究

Metabolomic signatures of physical activity in treatment-naive patients with early-onset vs. late-onset colorectal cancer: Results from the ColoCare Study

编号 3627 展板 13 时间 4/20 02:00–05:00 区域 Section 36 主讲 Victoria Bandera, MS
分会场 Metabolism and Microbiome in Cancer Initiation and Prevention
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作者与单位

Victoria Maria Bandera1, Tengda Lin1, Patricia Erickson1, Caroline Himbert1, Aik Choon Tan1, Mary C. Playdon1, Alan Maschek2, Paul Stewart1, Sheetal Hardikar1, Elaine M. Glenny3, Jennifer Ose4, Victoria Damerell5, Christy A. Warby1, Olena Aksonova1, Oliver Fiehn6, Kenneth Boucher2, Peter Schirmacher5, Ildiko Strehli1, Megan Mclaws1, Alejandro Sanchez1, Jolanta Jedrzkiewicz1, Lyen C. Huang1, Vaia Florou1, Jessica N. Cohan1, Alexander Brobeil5, Hans-Ulrich Kauczor5, Christoph Kahlert5, Meghana Karchi7, Elizabeth H. Wood7, Doratha A. Byrd8, Erin M. Siegel8, Adetunji T. Toriola9, David Shibata10, Christopher I. Li11, Jane C. Figueiredo12, Biljana Gigic5, Jatin Roper13, Stephen Hursting3, Cornelia M. Ulrich1

1University of Utah Huntsman Cancer Institute, Salt Lake City, UT,2University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT,3University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC,4University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Hannover, Germany,5Heidelberg University Hospital (UKHD), Heidelberg, Germany,6Professor, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA,7University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN,8Moffitt Cancer Center, Tampa, FL,9Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO,10Assoc. Professor of Surgical Onc., Div. of Interdiscipl. Onc., University of Tennessee Health Science Center - Memphis, Memphis, TN,11Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, Seattle, WA,12Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute, Los Angeles, CA,13Duke University, Durham, NC

摘要 Abstract

Introduction : Emerging studies link physical inactivity to early-onset colorectal cancer (EOCRC), but most rely on subjective measures of physical activity (PA). Metabolite signatures may offer an objective measure of PA that also captures the systemic metabolic response to activity. We assessed a previously validated PA metabolomic signature in patients with recently diagnosed colorectal cancer (CRC) and compared profile scores between patients with EOCRC (<50 yrs) vs. non-EOCRC ( > 50 yrs). Methods: We examined baseline (pre-surgery) data from 122 stage I-III patients with CRC in the ColoCare Study at Huntsman Cancer Institute (Utah) and Heidelberg University Hospital (Germany). PA for the previous year was measured with the International Physical Activity Questionnaire-Short Form. Untargeted serum metabolites and complex lipids were profiled at the West Coast Metabolomics Center. We calculated a 24-metabolite PA signature developed in >6,000 cancer-free individuals (Papadimitriou et al., CEBP, 2025) consisting of acylcarnitines, glycerophospholipids, monosaccharides, amino acids, and sphingolipids. Following metabolite pre-processing, normalization, and scaling, we performed multivariable linear regression on 20 metabolites available in our dataset, adjusting for age, sex, tumor stage, and body mass index (BMI). Metabolite scores were calculated for each participant by multiplying normalized metabolite concentrations by the previously developed PA metabolite signature coefficients and were then compared between EOCRC vs. non-EOCRC survivors. Results : Compared to patients with non-EOCRC (67±9 years, N=102), those with EOCRC (39±10 years, N=20) were diagnosed with higher stages (55% vs. 43% stage III), had lower prevalence of obese BMI (25% vs. 37%), and were more physically active (16±17 metabolic equivalent (MET) hrs/week vs. 11±17 MET hrs/week), p>0.05. Patients with EOCRC were more likely to meet PA guidelines ( > 150 min/week of moderate to vigorous PA; 60% vs. 38%) compared to those with non-EOCRC, p>0.05. Among the 20 metabolites investigated in our data, 15 showed a consistent direction of association with the previously developed PA signature. Patients with EOCRC had higher scores of the PA metabolite signature (0.04±0.09) than older patients (-0.01±0.10), t=2.3, p=0.03. This modest association remained significant after adjustment for stage, sex, and BMI (beta=0.05, p=0.048). Conclusions : A PA metabolite signature showed comparable associations to questionnaire-derived PA measures in our CRC survivor cohort, consistent with findings in healthy individuals. Patients with EOCRC reported a higher level of PA compared to those with non-EOCRC and had a significantly higher PA metabolite signature score. The metabolite response to PA may clarify how physical inactivity influences EOCRC risk and outcomes.
利益披露 Disclosure
V. M. Bandera, None.. T. Lin, None.. P. Erickson, None.. C. Himbert, None.. A. Tan, None.. M. C. Playdon, None.. A. Maschek, None.. P. Stewart, None.. S. Hardikar, None.. E. M. Glenny, None.. J. Ose, None.. V. Damerell, None.. C. A. Warby, None.. O. Aksonova, None.. O. Fiehn, None.. K. Boucher, None.. P. Schirmacher, None.. I. Strehli, None.. M. Mclaws, None.. A. Sanchez, None.. J. Jedrzkiewicz, None.. L. C. Huang, None.. V. Florou, None.. J. N. Cohan, None.. A. Brobeil, None.. H. Kauczor, None.. C. Kahlert, None.. M. Karchi, None.. E. H. Wood, None.. D. A. Byrd, None.. E. M. Siegel, None.. A. T. Toriola, None.. D. Shibata, None.. C. I. Li, None.. J. C. Figueiredo, None.. B. Gigic, None.. J. Roper, None.. S. Hursting, None.. C. M. Ulrich, None.

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