Publication Date:
2009-11-20
Description:
Abstract 652 Prevalence of obesity in children has been rapidly rising in the last decade in the US and other industrialized countries (US prevalence, ages 2-19, 16%, NHANES, 2008) and it represents a serious health concern. The impact of recipient's weight on mortality after hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) for non-malignant diseases is not well characterized. We studied the effect of body mass (BMI) on transplant outcomes in 1,281 patients aged 2-19 years who underwent HCT for severe aplastic anemia from 1990-2005. The study population was divided in five groups based on age-adjusted BMI percentiles. Patients in the 95th percentile BMI were classified as underweight, at risk for underweight, normal weight, at risk for overweight, and overweight respectively. Cox proportional hazards regression models for survival and acute graft-versus-host disease grade III-IV (aGVHD) were performed using BMI groups as the main effect and the normal weight (26-75th percentile) as the baseline comparison. Two-year overall survival was lower for overweight children (p
Print ISSN:
0006-4971
Electronic ISSN:
1528-0020
Topics:
Biology
,
Medicine
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