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. 2021 Oct 15;22(20):11150. doi: 10.3390/ijms222011150

Table 2.

Obesity and the prognosis of bladder cancer.

Study Author Study Year Total No. of Patients Total No. of Studies Study Type Comments
Noguchi et al. [19] 2015 8,920,237 7 Review “In two studies that also examined bladder cancer progression or recurrence, both (100%) noted strong associations of obesity with these outcomes”.
Westhoff et al. [25] 2018 16,198 13 (includes studies A and B) Systematic review and meta-analysis “No association of BMI with risk of progression was found. Results for BMI and prognosis in muscle-invasive or in all stages series were inconsistent.”
Gild et al. [26] 2017 Not applicable N/A Review “With regard to the impact of obesity on survival, no final conclusion can be drawn at this time, because past publications have yielded controversial results.”
Lin et al. [27] 2018 6452 11 (includes studies A and B) Meta-analysis “We did not observe a difference in the rate of cancer overall survival associated with obesity. However, obese patients were prone to shorter overall survival. The summary HR and 95% CI were 1.21 (0.97–1.52), p = 0.679.”

A = Chromecki et al., 2012 and B = Dabi et al., 2017.