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Fracture risk following bariatric surgery: a systematic review and meta-analysis

期刊

OSTEOPOROSIS INTERNATIONAL
卷 33, 期 3, 页码 511-526

出版社

SPRINGER LONDON LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s00198-021-06206-9

关键词

Bariatric surgery; Systematic review; Fractures; Meta-analysis

资金

  1. Fogarty International Center
  2. Office of Dietary Supplements of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [D43 TW009118]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Bariatric surgery, especially the malabsorptive type, may have a negative impact on bone health. Compared to non-surgical weight loss and obese controls, bariatric surgery, particularly the malabsorptive type, is associated with a higher risk of fractures. However, restrictive surgeries do not seem to increase fracture risk. Further long-term follow-up studies are needed to better assess the fracture risk in patients who have undergone bariatric surgery.
Bariatric surgery may negatively impact bone health. We aimed to compare fracture risk following bariatric surgery by type (malabsorptive, restrictive), or to non-surgical weight loss, or to controls with obesity. We systematically searched four databases from inception until October 2020. We included observational and interventional studies on adults. We screened articles and abstracted data in duplicate and independently and assessed the risk of bias. We conducted random-effects model meta-analyses (Review Manager v5.3), to calculate the relative risk of any or site-specific fracture (CRD42019128536). We identified four trials of unclear-to-high risk of bias and 15 observational studies of fair-to-good quality. Data on fracture risk following bariatric surgery compared to medical weight loss is scarce and limited by the small number of participants. In observational studies, at a mean/median post-operative follow-up > 2 years, the relative risk of any fracture was 45% (p < 0.001) and 61% (p = 0.04) higher following malabsorptive procedures compared to obese controls and restrictive procedures, respectively, with moderate to high heterogeneity. Site-specific relative fracture risk (hip and wrist) was one- to two-folds higher post malabsorptive procedures compared to obese controls or restrictive procedures. The risks of any and of site-specific fracture were not increased following restrictive procedures compared to obese controls. Fracture risk seems to increase following malabsorptive bariatric surgeries, at a mean/median follow-up > 2 years. The risk is not increased with restrictive surgeries. The available evidence has several limitations. A prospective and rigorous long-term follow-up of patients following bariatric surgery is needed for a better assessment of their fracture risk with aging.

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