BMI is a simple ratio of height to weight, and does not measure body composition, and “low BMI can mask excess adiposity while high BMI can mask low muscularity,” they wrote.
To determine whether associations between measures of body composition could be prognostic for overall mortality, the investigators conducted a retrospective cohort study with patients from Kaiser Permanente Northern California and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.
The cohort included 3,241 women diagnosed with stage II or III invasive breast cancer during 2005-2013 in California and during 2000-2012 in Boston. All of the patients included had either abdominal or pelvic CT scans or PET-CT scans at the time of diagnosis.
The investigators looked at the associations between sarcopenia, TAT, and low muscle radiodensity, and created hazard ratio (HR) estimates of the effects of the various interactions on overall mortality, adjusted for sociodemographics, tumor characteristics, treatment, BMI, and other body composition measures.