# Body composition as a potential biomarker of recurrence risk in patients with triple-negative breast cancer

**Authors:** Jill B. De Vis, Cong Wang, Kirsten V. Nguyen, Lili Sun, Brigitte Jia, Alexander D. Sherry, Mason N. Alford-Holloway, Meridith L. Balbach, Tatsuki Koyama, A. Bapsi Chakravarthy, Marjan Rafat

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s10549-025-07675-w · 2025-06-01

## TL;DR

This study suggests that visceral-to-subcutaneous adiposity ratio (VSR) from CT scans may predict distant recurrence risk in triple-negative breast cancer patients better than BMI.

## Contribution

The study introduces VSR as a novel imaging-based biomarker for predicting distant recurrence in triple-negative breast cancer.

## Key findings

- VSR was significantly associated with increased risk of distant recurrence (hazard ratio 4.25).
- BMI was not associated with any recurrence risk in TNBC patients.
- VSR may serve as a prognostic biomarker for distant recurrence in TNBC.

## Abstract

Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) patients are at increased risk for recurrence compared to other subtypes of breast cancer. Previous evidence showed that adiposity may contribute to worsened cancer control. Current measures of obesity, such as body-mass index (BMI), are poor surrogates of adiposity, while visceral-to-subcutaneous adiposity ratio (VSR), which can be measured from routine computed tomography (CT) imaging, is a direct adiposity measure. We hypothesized that VSR is a stronger predictor of recurrence compared with BMI in patients with TNBC.

This study includes 162 women with stage I-III TNBC who completed standard of care therapy. Measures of body composition, including VSR, visceral adiposity (VA), and subcutaneous adiposity (SA), were estimated using a semi-automated quantitative imaging tool on CT images of the abdomen at the level of L2-L3. Anthropometric measures included BMI and waist circumference and were obtained from CT images. Associations of adiposity measures and recurrence risk were assessed using Fine and Gray competing risk models with death as a competing risk and age at diagnosis and clinical disease stage as covariates.

During a median follow-up time of 7.1 years, 55 patients had recurrence. The median BMI at baseline was 30.2 [Quartiles: 26.3–35.2]. Body composition was not associated with overall or locoregional recurrence. VSR was significantly associated with an increased risk of distant recurrence, with a subdistribution hazard ratio of 4.25 (95% CI: 1.06–17.02), p = 0.041. By contrast, BMI was not associated with any recurrence risk.

Consistent with our hypothesis, VSR was associated with a significant risk of distant recurrence and therefore may be a prognostic biomarker. Future directions include interventions targeting VSR reduction among patients with TNBC and VSR-directed therapy modulation.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** triple-negative breast cancer (MONDO:0005494), breast cancer (MONDO:0004989)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** stage I-III (MESH:D062706), death (MESH:D003643), breast cancer (MESH:D001943), cancer (MESH:D009369), TNBC (MESH:D064726), obesity (MESH:D009765), adiposity (MESH:D018205)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12031647/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12031647