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Sleeve Gastrectomy as the Primary Procedure. James Ellsmere, MD MSc FRCSC Surgical Director, Weight Loss Program QE II Health Sciences Centre Dalhousie University, Halifax NS. Disclosure. Ethicon Endosurg – speaking. First used in staged approach for the super obese
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Sleeve Gastrectomy as the Primary Procedure James Ellsmere, MD MSc FRCSC Surgical Director, Weight Loss Program QE II Health Sciences Centre Dalhousie University, Halifax NS
Disclosure • Ethicon Endosurg – speaking
First used in staged approach for the super obese Increasingly being used as primary procedure with good weight loss and resolution of obesity related comorbidities Involves resecting the greater curvature of the stomach Reduces ghrelin levels for up to a year Sleeve Gastrectomy Gagner et al. Surg Obes Relat Dis 2009
Advantages • Low mortality rate (0.39 percent) • Low complication rate (3 to 8 percent) • Low reintervention rate • Preservation of the pylorus • Maintenance of physiological food passage • Avoidance of foreign material
Disadvantages • Long term follow-up is limited • Can exacerbate GERD • Leaks though manageable can be challenging
International SG Expert PanelConsensus Statement • Expert panelists were invited to participate according to their publications, knowledge and experience, and identification as surgeons who had performed 500 cases (>12000 cases) • Topics for consensus • patient selection • contraindications • surgical technique • prevention of complications • management of complications Rosenthal et al. Surg Obes Relat Dis 2012
Objectives • Review the ASMBS position on SG • Discuss the common criticisms of SG • Nova Scotia experience
ASMBS 2011 Position Statement • SG is acceptable option as a primary bariatric procedure • SG has a risk/benefit profile that lies between LAGB and RYGB • Long-term weight regain can occur and, in the case of SG, this could be managed effectively with re-intervention • Informed consent for SG used as a primary procedure should be consistent with consent provided for other bariatric procedures and should include the risk of long-term weight gain
Criticisms • Earlier data suggest SG only half as good as DS • Lack of long term data does not justify this approach • Why base program on operation where we expect failure to be 30% • Poor outcomes have the potential to tarnish image of bariatric surgery • SG complications though rare can be very challenging to manage
Expected Excess Weight Loss Brethauer et al. Surg Obes Relat Dis 2009
Bougie • The bougie is positioned on the lesser curve distal to the point of transection • Too large will decrease expected weight loss • Too small will increase risk of post-op nausea, stenosis and leak • Most surgeons use 32-40F (range 30-60F)
Michigan Bariatric Surgery Collaborative • Comparative effectiveness analysis of the safety and effectiveness of SG, RYGB, and LAGB • ~ 9,000 patients matched on preoperative risk factors and predictors of weight loss outcomes to deal with the issue of selection bias • Outcomes included complications occurring within 30 days, weight loss, comorbidity resolution, quality of life, and patient satisfaction at 1, 2, and 3 years follow-up
Michigan Bariatric Surgery Collaborative • Overall complication rates among patients undergoing SG (6.3%) were significantly lower than for RYGB (10.0%, p<0.0001) but higher than for LAGB (2.4%, p<0.0001) • Serious complication rates were similar for SG (2.4%) and RYGB (2.5%, p=0.736) but higher than for LAGB (1.0%, p<0.0001) • Excess body weight loss at 1-year was 69% RYGB, 60% SG, and 34% LAGB • SG was similarly closer to RYGB than LAGB with regard to resolution of obesity-related comorbidities, quality of life, and patient satisfaction
Co-morbidity Remission and Improvement Brethauer et al. Surg Obes Relat Dis 2009
Unacceptable Failure Rate • What definition of failure? • EWL < 50 % • Persistent co morbidities • Lack of lifestyle modification (diet & exercise) • How does the failure rate compare? • SG 25-30% • RYGB 20% • LAGB 35-40% • Causes of failure are multifactorial • Addressing anatomical issues without addressing lifestyle issues likely result in poor long term outcomes
Poor Outcomes Tarnish Bariatric Surgery • Weight regain though frustrating is accepted complication of bariatric procedures • Debilitating complications like anemia secondary recalcitrant ulcers and internal hernias resulting in short gut syndrome can have a negative lasting effect • Nutritional and Vitamin deficiency requiring hospital admission for management also tarnish image
Managing Leaks is Challenging • Early < 48h • repair, drain +/- j tube for feeding • Late > 4 days • drain + j tube for feeding
Options if Drainage Persists • Refer to center with experience in endoscopic stenting, clips, glue • If persists, consider RYGB • Stoma appliance
Nova Scotia SG Program • The best option for morbidly obese patients is to have access to bariatric surgery program in their home province • Patients who do not develop healthier lifestyle (diet and exercise) will fail any operation over the long term • Patients undergoing malabsorptive procedures should have access to long term follow-up • Deaths or significant number of complications would could potentially shut down program
NS Experience 166 patients 136 female (82%) Mean age 44 years (range 16-68, SD 10) Mean pre-operative BMI 49.6 (range 23.9-73.5, SD 7) Mean operative time 93 min (range 56-232, SD 33) Mean hospital stay 2.6 (2-8, SD 0.8) days Reoperation rate 1.8%
Summary • SG is acceptable option as a primary bariatric procedure • SG has a risk/benefit profile that lies between LAGB and LRYGB • Long-term weight regain can occur and, in the case of SG, this could be managed effectively with re-intervention
Thank you James Ellsmere, MD MSc FRCSC James.Ellsmere@dal.ca
Nova Scotia WLS Program • BMI > 60 • Challenging to perform high quality sleeve with low complication rate • Patients counseled and offered medically supervised diet/exercise plan • Graduate 50% from program with excellent outcomes • BMI 35 – 60 • Goal 10lb weight loss prior to sleeve
Outcomes Brethauer et al. Surg Obes Relat Dis 2009
Access and Port Placement Karmali et al. Can J Surg 2010
Distal Transection Point • The distal transection point is measured relative to the pylorus • Too long will decrease expected weight loss • Too short may effect gastric emptying • Most surgeons start 5 cm (range 1-10 cm) proximal to the pylorus
Bougie • The bougie is positioned on the lesser curve distal to the point of transection • Too large will decrease expected weight loss • Too small will increase risk of post-op nausea, stenosis and leak • Most surgeons use 32-40F (range 30-60F)
Stapling • The goal is the creation of a uniform gastric tube • Requires optimal visualization and lateral traction on the stomach • Avoid the esophagus - leave 1 cm of fundus as precaution
Staple Line Reinforcement • Staple-line was reinforced by 65.1% of the surgeons; of these, 50.9% over-sew, 42.1% buttress, and 7% do both • Several series without buttress material with 1% bleeding rate, 1% leak rate • Consider optimal staple height, need for tissue compression, clipping bleeders and selectively oversewing Gagner et al. Surg Obes Relat Dis 2009
Staple Line Testing • Intraoperative leak testing with air (gastroscope) and/or methylene blue dye • Consider leaving drain
Sleeve Gastrectomy and Hiatal Hernia Repair • Small cases series • Morbid obesity is risk factor for failed hiatal hernia repair • If large or symptomatic hernia and BMI > 35, hernia repair + sleeve is an option • Post op course similar to sleeve alone
Band to Sleeve • Small case series • Risk of complications higher than primary operation • If treating band complications, consider two stage approach • Avoid stapling through compromised tissue
Low Rate of Complications • High leak occurred in 1.5% • Lower leak in 0.5% • Hemorrhage in 1.1% • Splenic injury in 0.1% • Stenosis in 0.9% • GERD @ 3 mo 6.5% (range 0-83%) • Mortality was 0.2 +/-0.9% Gagner et al. Surg Obes Relat Dis 2009
Patient Decision • Boils down to tolerance for risk and perceived risk reward • Bariatric vs non-operative management question is clear • What’s the best bariatric surgery for the patient is difficult to know
C. Hoogerboord MB ChB, MMed, S. Wiebe MD, D. Lawlor NP, R. Stewart BSc, T. Ransom MD, D. Klassen MD, J. Ellsmere MD, MSc (jellsmer@dal.ca) Department of Surgery, Division of General Surgery, Dalhousie University, Halifax NS Perioperative Outcomes of Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy, Effectiveness in Short to Medium Term Weight Loss and Improvement in Diabetes Mellitus
Introduction Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy (LSG) is increasingly being performed as a stand-alone bariatric procedure with short and medium term weight loss and improvement in obesity associated comorbidities comparable to Laparoscopic Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass, (LRYGBP) the current gold standard in bariatric surgery.
Discussion LSG is gaining popularity as a final surgical treatment for morbid obesity Complications are infrequent but most significant for staple line leak (2%), bleeding (1.2%), sleeve stenosis (0.8%) and death (0.19%)1. Gagner et al. Surg Obes Relat Dis 2009
Effectiveness as weight loss procedure confirmed by several studies, 12 and 24 month %EWL 55.8 and 52.4 respectively in a systematic review of Brethauer et al2. More than weight loss seen with LAGB but somewhat less than with LRYGBP3. • Concept of metabolic surgery now recognized by endocrine specialists. LSG led to 2 year remission rate of Type 2 DM of 75% vs 0% with optimal medical therapy in patients with BMI>354.
Aim To review our experience with Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy (LSG) in terms of perioperative outcomes, effectiveness in inducing weight loss and improvement or resolution of Diabetes Mellitus (DM) over a two year period
Methods A retrospective review of prospectively recorded data was performed for all patients who underwent LSG from September 01, 2007 to June 30, 2011 Patient demographics and perioperative data were collected. Postoperative follow-up data was obtained at 6, 12 and 24 months and included Percentage Excess Weight Loss (%EWL) for all patients In the subgroup of 85 patients with a preoperative diagnosis of DM, additional data included HbA1c, AC Glucose and improvement or resolution of Diabetes Improvement of DM was defined as a decrease in dose or number of anti-diabetic drugs required to control serum glucose whereas resolution was defined as normalization of AC glucose (<5.6mmol/l) and HbA1c (<6.5%) with discontinuation of all anti-diabetic drugs
Perioperative Results 166 patients 136 (82%) female Mean age 44 (range 16-68, SD 10) years Mean pre-operative BMI 49.6 (range 23.9-73.5, SD 7) Mean operative time 93 (Range 56-232, SD 33) minutes. One (0.6%) conversion to laparotomy Mean hospital stay 2.6 (2-8, SD 0.8) days. Reoperation rate 1.8%.