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GASTRIC BYPASS LITERATURE REVIEW 2009-10. Bruce Schirmer, M.D. Treatment of vitamin D depletion after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass: a randomized prospective clinical trial A.M. Carlin, D. S. Rao, K.M. Yager, et al. (Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit) SOARD 2009 5:444-9. VITAMIN D DEFICIENCY.
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GASTRIC BYPASSLITERATURE REVIEW2009-10 Bruce Schirmer, M.D.
Treatment of vitamin D depletion after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass: a randomized prospective clinical trial A.M. Carlin, D. S. Rao, K.M. Yager, et al. (Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit) SOARD 2009 5:444-9
VITAMIN D DEFICIENCY PRCT (n=60) RYGB patients Preop assessment of vitamin D depletion (25 OH D < 20 ng/mL) Controls: 800 IU vit D + 1500 mg calcium daily Treatment: Add 50,000 IU vitD/week
VITAMIN D DEFICIENCY 1 yr postop: remeasure: Ca, PTH, 25OHD, alk phos, urinary N-telopeptide, and bone min. dens. Found higher 25OH vit D levels, higher resolution of HTN in rx Criticism: Data not tight
Patterns of readmission and reoperation within 90 days after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass T.A. Kellogg, T. Swan, D.A. Leslie, H. Buchwald, S. Ikramuddin (Univ. of Minnesota) SOARD 2009; 5:416-24
GASTRIC BYPASS READMISSIONS • 1222 gastric bypass patients • 3 year period • 173 had 252 ED visits (79), readmissions (164), or reoperations (35) • 58% to primary, 42% to local hospital
GASTRIC BYPASS READMISSIONS • Readmitted/operated patients had a greater BMI than no return group (50 vs. 48, p=.001) • Open RYGB had higher incidence (37/134) than laparoscopic RYGB (136/915, p=.002) • 1 visit: 120, 2: 34, 3: 12, 4: 7
ENCOUNTER RELATED TO RYGB • Readmissions 126/164 77% • ED visits 48/79 61% • Reoperations 25/35 71% • Same day surgery 5/9 56%
Improved bariatric surgery outcomes for Medicare beneficiaries after implementation of Medicare National Coverage Determination N. Nguyen, S. Hohmann, J. Slone, et al (UC Irvine) Arch Surg 2010; 145:72-8
OUTCOMES AFTER NCD • Study compared 3196 bariatric procedures done 18 mos before and 3068 18 mos after NCD from UHC database • First six months after NCD volume of Medicare cases was down 29% but returned to baseline in one year and increased after two years
OUTCOMES AFTER NCD • More bands done (twice as many) and RYGB proportion increased from 60 to 77% • LOS decreased (3.5 vs. 3.1 days) and complication rates decreased (12.2 vs. 10.0%) while mortality remained stable (.28 vs. .20%)
Identifying high-quality bariatric surgery centers: hospital volume or risk-adjusted outcomes? J.B. Dimick, N.H. Osborne, L. Nicholas, & J.D. Birkmeyer (Univ. of Michigan) JACS 2009; 209:702-6
VOLUME VS. OUTCOMES • New York State Inpatient database for 2003-4 • 105 hospitals, 32,381 patients • Morbidity from dx & procedure codes • Calculated risk-adjusted morbidity
VOLUME VS. OUTCOMES • Ascertained proportion of hospital-level variation explained by both outcome and volume • Compared outcome vs. volume at predicting future performance
VOLUME VS. OUTCOMES • Risk-adjusted morbidity (RAM) explained 83% of future hospital-level variation in morbidity vs. only 21% with volume alone • “Best” vs. “worst” quartile hospitals predicted fourfold difference in future performance versus twofold based on hospital volume
Standardization of the fully stapled laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass for obesity reduces early immediate postoperative morbidity and mortality: a single center study on 2606 patients B. Dillermans, N. Sakran, S. Van Cauwenberge, et al (Bruges) Obesity Surg 2009; 19:1355-64
LARGE SINGLE CENTER BELGIAN STUDY • Fully-stapled Lap RYGB • 4 year period, 2606 patients • Mean BMI 41.4 • Mean LOS 3.35 days • Mean OR time 63 minutes • One death (0.04%)
LARGE SINGLE CENTER BELGIAN STUDY • Total postop complications in 5.8% • GI bleeding in 3.42% • SBO in 0.35% • Leak in 0.19% • Other complications 1.8%
Quality of life after bariatric surgery: A population-based cohort study J.A. Batsis, F. Lopez-Jiminez, M.L. Collazo-Claveil, et al (Mayo Clinic, Rochester) Am J Medicine 2009; 122: issue 11 (online)
SURVEY METHODS • RYGB patients assessed by baseline and follow-up Linear Analogue Self-Assessment Questionnaire, LASA) • Follow-up quality of life (Short Form-12) and activity (Goldman’s Specific Activity Scale) • 268 & 273 mailed with 55% of operative and 32% of non-operative returned
RESULTS • Mean follow-up was 4.0 & 3.8 yrs • Change in LASA was + 3.1+0.4 (p<.001) • Adjusted SF-12 = 12 points higher for operative pts (p<.001) • Operative patients with symptomatic improvement (p<.001) and self-reported exercise tolerance improvement (p=.01) versus non-operative patients
RESULTS • Predictors of high follow-up LASA were rx for depression, % wt lost, resolution of dyslipidemia and CV disease • Predictors of follow-up for SF-12 were % wt loss, resolution of diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and rx for depression
CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE • Quality of life improved after RYGB • Better follow-up QOL related to degree of wt loss • Self-reported functional status markedly better in surgical pts • Multidisciplinary wt loss program affords better outcomes
Perioperative safety in the Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery The Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery Consortium NEJM 2009; 361:445-54
METHODS • 10 sites in LABS • 2005-2007 • 30 day major adverse outcomes • Death, VTE, percut., endo or operative intervention, failure to be discharged
RESULTS • 4776 patients • Age 44.5 yrs, 21% male, BMI 46.5 • RYGB in 3412 (87.2% laparosc.) • LAGB in 1198 • 30 day mortality 0.3% • 4.3% patients had one major adverse outcome
RESULTS • Increased risk seen for: • Hx DVT/PE, OSA, and impaired functional status • Extreme BMI associate with increased risk but age, sex, race, ethnic group were not
Improvement in glucose metabolism after bariatric surgery: Comparison of laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass and laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy R. Peterli, B. Wolnerhanssen, T. Peters, et al. (Basel, Switzerland) Ann Surg 2009; 250:234-41
METHODS • Prospective randomized trial • 13 RYGB vs. 14 LSG patients • Fasting and meal-stimulated insulin, glucose, and GLP-1 levels • Before and 1 wk & 3 mos postop • Test meal followed by blood samples
RESULTS • Excess BMI loss equivalent after RYGB (43.3%) and LSG (39.4%) at 3 months • Both operations produced increased postprandial levels of plasma insulin and GLP-1 (p<.01)
RESULTS • Comparable levels of insulin and GLP-1 at 3 months • RYGB patients had early and augmented insulin response at 1 week postop • Authors conclude that data do NOT support the idea that proximal small intestine mediates the improvement in glucose homeostasis
Probiotics improve outcomes after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery: A prospective randomized trial G.A. Woodard, B. Encarnacion, RJ Downey, J.M. Morton (Stanford Univ) JOGS 2009; 13:1198-1204
METHODS • 44 RYGB patients randomized to probiotic (Lactobacillus daily postop) vs. control • Measured H2 levels, GIQoL, serologies, and wt loss postop and at 3 & 6 mos
RESULTS • Lower bacterial overgrowth in probiotic group at 6 mos • Wt loss for probiotic significantly better at 3 mos (47.7% vs. 38.6%) but not 6 mos (67.2% vs. 60.8%) • Probiotic group had higher B12 levels • Both groups had better GIQoL
Effect of stoma size on weight loss after laparoscopic gastric bypas surgery: results of a blinded randomized controlled trial D.R. Cottam, B. Fisher, et al (Salt Lake City) Obes Surgery 2009; 19:13-7
METHODS • 200 RYGB patients randomized into two groups of 100 • 21 vs. 25 mm stapler to do GJ • %EWL and clinical comorbidities measured postop • Logistic regression to determine effect of stapler size • 2 year follow-up
RESULTS • Follow-up for groups: 68% & 66% • Stapler size did not predict weight loss • Did predict need for dilatations • Only predictor of wt loss was male gender and high initial wt • Both groups > 80% EWL
Five-year outcome with gastric bypass: Roux limb length makes a difference JJ Gleysteen (UAB) SOARD 2009; 5:242-9
METHODS • Weight loss at 5 yrs compared for 3 sequential groups of pts after RYGB • Comparisons for pts with BMI > or < 50 (SO vs. MO) • 344 patients followed 49% 5 yrs
CONCLUSIONS • Roux limb lengths improve weight loss early and late in SO but not in MO patients • Recidivism was not affected by Roux limb length
Revisional operations for marginal ulcer after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass RA Patel, RE Brolin, A Gandhi (Princeton, NJ) SOARD 2009; 5:317-22
FINDINGS • 2282 patients who underwent RYGB reviewed for marginal ulcer • 122 (5.3%) developed marginal ulcers • 32% required revision surgery • Of these, 72% had gastrogastric fistulas
FINDINGS • Recurrent ulcers after surgery in 7.7% (all smokers) • Revision rate less after lap than open (0.6% vs. 2.1%, p<.0025) • 87% of revisions pts remained asymptomatic
QUICK SHOT: REVIEW ARTICLE Endocrine and metabolic response to gastric bypass J. Saliba, J. Wattanacheril, N.N. Abumrad (UT Memphis) Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care 2009; 12:515-21
FINDINGS • Reviewed literature on hormonal changes after RYGB • Strongest effects seen in GLP-1, GIP, and ghrelin • Less so in PYY and PP • Conclude GLP-1 not whole story