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Long-term incidence of gallstone disease after bariatric surgery: results from the nonrandomized controlled Swedish Obese Subjects study
Affiliation:1. Department of Surgery at Halland Hospital, Halmstad, Sweden;2. Department of Molecular and Clinical Medicine, Institute of Medicine, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden;3. Department of Chronic Disease Prevention, National Institute of Health and Welfare, Helsinki, Finland;4. Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Örebro University Hospital, Örebro, Sweden
Abstract:BackgroundGallstone disease is a known short-term complication of bariatric surgery; little is known of the long-term incidence.ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to investigate the association between bariatric surgery and long-term incidence of gallstone disease.SettingsA total of 25 surgery departments and 480 primary healthcare centers in Sweden.MethodsThe Swedish Obese Subjects study is a prospective, controlled study comparing the effects of bariatric surgery with usual care with a follow-up of 20 years, including 4047 individuals. The current report includes all participants without previous or concomitant cholecystectomy (n = 3597). Operative techniques used in the surgery group (n = 1755) were gastric bypass (n = 236), vertical banded gastroplasty (n = 1202), and gastric banding (n = 317). The control group (n = 1842) received customary treatment for obesity. Gallstone disease was a predefined secondary endpoint in the Swedish Obese Subjects study and the primary endpoint of this report. Data were obtained by cross-checking our study database with the Swedish National Patient Register of diagnosis and procedures.ResultsIn the surgery and control groups, respectively, there were 307 and 252 first-time events of symptomatic gallstone disease and 230 and 170 cholecystectomies (log-rank P < .001, both outcomes). Bariatric surgery was associated with an increased risk of symptomatic gallstone disease, with a more pronounced risk during the first years of follow-up (P = .002) and an increased risk for cholecystectomy but with no time-varying effect (P = .213).ConclusionsBariatric surgery increases the risk for symptomatic gallstone disease and cholecystectomy, especially during the first years following treatment.
Keywords:Obesity  Bariatric surgery  Gallstone disease  Cholecystectomy
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