4.6 Article

Constraints of Weight Loss as a Marker of Bariatric Surgery Success: An Exploratory Study

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2021.640191

Keywords

gastric bypass; cardiometabolic risk (factors); metabolic health; obesity; weight loss

Categories

Funding

  1. Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) [2016/10993-5, 2019/18039-7]
  2. Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [400157/2016-0, 301571/2017-1]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Weight loss following bariatric surgery does not necessarily reflect improvements in cardiometabolic health, suggesting the need for alternate proxies to better predict surgery success.
Purpose The aim of this exploratory study was to investigate whether the degree of weight loss properly reflects improvements in cardiometabolic health among patients who underwent Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. Methods In this ancillary analysis from a clinical trial, patients were clustered into tertiles according to the magnitude of the percentage weight loss (1st tertile: higher weight loss: -37.1 +/- 5.8%; 2nd tertile: moderate weight loss: -29.7 +/- 1.4%; 3rd tertile: lower weight loss: -24.2 +/- 2.3%). Delta changes (9 months after surgery-baseline) in clustered cardiometabolic risk (i.e., blood pressure index, fasting glucose, high-density lipoprotein [HDL] and triglycerides [TG]), glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), homeostasis model assessment (HOMA-IR), and C-reactive protein (CRP) were calculated. Results A total of 42 patients who had complete bodyweight data (age = 40 +/- 8 year; BMI = 47.8 +/- 7.1 kg/m(2)) were included. Surgery led to substantial weight loss (-37.9 +/- 11.3 kg, P < 0,001), and clinically significant improvements in blood pressure index (-17.7 +/- 8.2 mmHg, P < 0.001), fasting glucose (-36.6 +/- 52.5 mg/dL, P < 0.001), HDL (9.4 +/- 7.1 mg/dL, P < 0.001), TG (-35.8 +/- 44.1 mg/dL P < 0,001), HbA1c (-1.2 +/- 1.6%, P < 0.001), HOMA-IR (-4.7 +/- 3.9 mg/dL, P < 0.001) and CRP (-8.5 +/- 6.7 mu g/mL P < 0.001). Comparisons across tertiles revealed no differences for cardiometabolic risk score, fasting glucose, HbAc1, HOMA-IR, blood pressure index, CRP, HDL, and TG (P > 0.05 for all). Individual variable analysis confirmed cardiometabolic improvements across the spectrum on weight-loss. There were no associations between weight loss and any dependent variable. Conclusion Weight loss following bariatric surgery does not correlate with improvements in cardiovascular risk factors. These findings suggest that weight loss alone may be insufficient to assess the cardiometabolic success of bariatric surgery, and the search for alternate proxies that better predict surgery success are needed.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available