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Obesity surgery makes patients healthier and more functional: real world results from the United Kingdom National Bariatric Surgery Registry
Authors:Alexander Dimitri Miras  Anna Kamocka  Darshan Patel  Simon Dexter  Ian Finlay  James C. Hopkins  Omar Khan  Marcus Reddy  Peter Sedman  Peter Small  Shaw Somers  Suzie Cro  Peter Walton  Carel W. le Roux  Richard Welbourn
Affiliation:1. Imperial College London, Division of Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolism, Hammersmith Hospital Campus, London, United Kingdom;2. Leeds Teaching Hospitals, West Yorkshire, United Kingdom;3. Royal Cornwall Hospital, Truro, United Kingdom;4. Southmead Hospital, Westbury-on-Trym, Bristol, United Kingdom;5. St. George’s University Hospital, London, United Kingdom;6. Hull and East Yorkshire Hospital, Hull, United Kingdom;g. Sunderland Hospital, Sunderland, United Kingdom;h. Queen Alexandra Hospital, Portsmouth, United Kingdom;i. Imperial College London, Imperial Clinical Trials Unit, London, United Kingdom;j. Dendrite Clinical Systems Ltd, The Hub, Henley-on-Thames, United Kingdom;k. Diabetes Complications Research Centre, Conway Institute, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin, Ireland;l. Department of Upper GI and Bariatric Surgery, Musgrove Park Hospital, Taunton, United Kingdom
Abstract:

Background

The National Bariatric Surgery Registry (NBSR) is the largest bespoke database in the field in the United Kingdom.

Objectives

Our aim was to analyze the NBSR to determine whether the effects of obesity surgery on associated co-morbidities observed in small randomized controlled clinical trials could be replicated in a "real life" setting within U.K. healthcare.

Setting

United Kingdom.

Methods

All NBSR entries for operations between 2000 and 2015 with associated demographic and co-morbidity data were analyzed retrospectively.

Results

A total of 50,782 entries were analyzed. The patients were predominantly female (78%) and white European with a mean age of 45 ± 11 years and a mean body mass index of 48 ± 8 kg/m2. Over 5 years of follow-up, statistically significant reductions in the prevalence of type 2 diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia, sleep apnea, asthma, functional impairment, arthritis, and gastroesophageal reflux disease were observed. The "remission" of these co-morbidities was evident 1 year postoperatively and reached a plateau 2 to 5 years after surgery. Obesity surgery was particularly effective on functional impairment and diabetes, almost doubling the proportion of patients able to climb 3 flights of stairs and halving the proportion of patients with diabetes related hyperglycemia compared with preoperatively. Surgery was safe with a morbidity of 3.1% and in-hospital mortality of .07% and a reduced median inpatient stay of 2 days, despite an increasingly sick patient population.

Conclusions

Obesity surgery in the U.K. results not only in weight loss, but also in substantial improvements in obesity-related co-morbidities. Appropriate support and funding will help improve the quality of the NBSR data set even further, thus enabling its use to inform healthcare policy.
Keywords:Obesity  Bariatric surgery  Metabolic surgery  Diabetes  Functional status  Surgical registry
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