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Bariatric surgery: a cost-effective intervention for morbid obesity; functional and nutritional outcomes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2010

Richard Welbourn*
Affiliation:
South West Level 1 Bariatric Surgery Centre, Musgrove Park Hospital, TauntonTA1 5DA, UK
Dimitri Pournaras
Affiliation:
South West Level 1 Bariatric Surgery Centre, Musgrove Park Hospital, TauntonTA1 5DA, UK
*
*Corresponding author: Richard Welbourn, fax 01823 343560, email Richard.welbourn@tst.nhs.uk
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Abstract

Obesity has been described as the health crisis of the 21st century. It is a chronic lifelong medical condition, whose pattern often starts in childhood, and is demographically worsening in every developed country. The cost of treating the many medical conditions associated with obesity threatens to overwhelm healthcare resources. Medical treatments produce at most no more than 10% weight loss in the severely obese, with high failure rates. In this article, we review the available evidence regarding long-term reduction in weight, reduced mortality and improvement in most, if not all, obesity-related comorbidities. There is a need for daily multivitamins and extra minerals, especially with gastric bypass, and nutritional deficiencies of vitamins D and B12, Ca, Fe and folate need monitoring and prevention. Currently there is no medical therapy on the near horizon that will match the effect of surgery, which, if done safely, remains the only effective therapy. Bariatric surgery is cost effective, and health providers should embrace the development and rapid expansion of services.

Type
Conference on ‘Malnutrition matters’
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2010

Abbreviations:
HR

hazard ratio

RR

relative risk

In 2008 for the first time there were reported to be more obese individuals in the world than malnourished, with 1 billion obese compared to 800 million malnourished. It is accepted that the average lifespan for an obese individual is about 9 years less than for normal-weight individuals, and that those who are obese have only a one in seven chance of reaching a normal lifespan(Reference Humadi, Welbourn, Johnson and Taylor1). In developed countries, obese individuals are stigmatised and disenfranchised, and have higher rates of unemployment and higher rates of benefit claims(Reference Hawkins, Osborne and Finlay2).

The causes of the so-called obesogenic environment are complex(Reference Sørensen3). In the UK, the 2007 Foresight report accepted that humans are predisposed to putting on weight (‘passive obesity’) and recognised that in the current obesogenic environment with freely available energy-dense foods, motorised transport and reduced need for physical activity, weight gain is inevitable(4). The report estimates that within 40 years, by 2050, 60% of adult men and 50% of adult women will be obese. Worryingly, by then a quarter of all children under 16 may also be obese. Clearly the primary goal must be to change social policy drastically and to quickly stop this.

A systematic review of 24 studies of individuals born between 1927 and 1994 suggested that the relative risk (RR) for adult obesity was between 1·35 and 9·38 if the individual was above the 85th centile as a child(Reference Baird, Fisher and Lucas5). More recent data suggest that a ‘tipping point’ for overweight and obesity is reached early, with half of those overweight up to the age of 20 becoming overweight before 2 years and 90% before 5 years(Reference Harrington, Nguyen and Paulson6). These data indicate that the adult obesity epidemic is likely to worsen before it can improve. One report even suggests that obesity may be a socially communicable disease(Reference Christakis and Fowler7). In a study of the Framingham population of 12 000 individuals from 1971 to 2003, the likelihood of obesity occurring within social networks increased by 57% if a friend became obese, by 40% if a sibling became obese and by 37% if a spouse became obese(Reference Christakis and Fowler7).

Considerable resource is devoted to treating obesity-related comorbidities such as type 2 diabetes, sleep apnoea and arthritis. The cost burden of this to health services is inexorable, as increasing BMI is an independent predictor of development of obesity-related disease(Reference Belle and Chapman8). Thus by 2050, the cost to the National Health Service in the UK is estimated to double to £10×109 per year and the indirect cost to society is estimated to rise to nearly £50×109 at today's prices(4).

In addition, increasing evidence suggests that the epidemic of obesity, led by the USA, but closely followed by the UK and many other countries in Europe, is likely to get much worse before any attempts at prevention are effective. No medical therapy produces effective long-term weight loss. The withdrawals of rimonabant in 2009 and sibutramine in 2010 from the market have done nothing to encourage enthusiasm for a magic tablet(Reference Williams9). Orlistat is the only drug still available, but it leads to unpleasant defecation of fat and produces only modest weight loss(Reference Williams9).

In contrast, surgical treatment for the severely obese can produce durable effective weight loss(Reference Leff and Heath10). Thus, bariatric surgery, derived from the Greek word ‘baros’ for weight and the suffix ‘-iatric’ from the word ‘iatrike’ meaning ‘medicine or surgery’, is now established as a mainstream surgical specialty in the USA, South America, Australasia and many European countries. Indeed, in the USA, bariatric surgery may already exceed cholecystectomy as the commonest elective abdominal operation(Reference Belle, Berk and Courcoulas11). According to the 1991 National Institutes of Health guidelines, a patient qualifies for surgery if the BMI is >40, or if the BMI is >35 in the presence of an obesity-related comorbidity that may improve with surgery. The 2006 National Institute of Clinical Excellence Guidance uses the same BMI range and suggests referral for surgery if ‘all appropriate non-surgical measures have failed to achieve or maintain adequate clinically beneficial weight loss for at least 6 months’, patients have specialist management and are committed to long-term follow-up(12).

Common bariatric operations

Gastric bypass and gastric banding

These are the commonest operations worldwide and in the UK(Reference Buchwald and Oien13, Reference Flum and Belle14). Other operations such as biliopancreatic diversion (the Scopinaro operation), its variant the duodenal switch, sleeve gastrectomy, and sleeve gastrectomy combined with intestinal transposition constitute only a small percentage of operations performed. Despite many hundreds of thousands of bypasses and bandings performed over the last two decades, there have been only two randomised trials between the two published(Reference Nguyen, Slone and Nguyen15, Reference Angrisani, Lorenzo and Borrelli16). Many authors consider that randomisation is not feasible since strong patient, surgeon and cultural preferences drive patient choice(Reference Weber, Müller and Bucher17). In a matched-pair analysis, Weber and colleagues found better weight loss at every time point up to 2 years favouring bypass(Reference O'Brien, McPhail and Chaston18).

Although O'Brien and co-workers maintain that weight loss for band patients catches up with bypass after this point, it is not clear whether a similar weight loss for up to 5 and 10 years can be achieved on an intention-to-treat basis outside centres of excellence(Reference O'Brien, McPhail and Chaston18). It is also not known whether the more rapid weight loss, and therefore quicker improvement in comorbidity, that bypass causes is beneficial in the long term. Ideally, lean mass should be preserved during weight loss. Some evidence suggests that gastric banding is better at this than gastric bypass(Reference Dixon, Strauss and Laurie19). Intuitively, however, barring the dangers of too rapid weight loss, very large patients need resolution of their comorbidity quickly. Certainly this is what the pharmaceutical companies would seek to achieve if bariatric surgery was a tablet.

Typically a band patient loses 40% excess weight by 1 year, rising to 50–60%, provided there is no complication, by 2–3 years. A bypass patient loses 60–70% excess weight by 1 year, settling at 55–65% thereafter. Given the above, long-term comparative data (and randomised trials) are still needed to determine best long-term treatment (5–15 years) on an intention-to-treat basis.

What determines the choice of operation? Patient preference, peer pressure, surgeon and cultural preferences seem to be the greatest influences(Reference Weber, Müller and Bucher17). Whatever the choice, it is clear that surgeons should ensure that patients are fully educated about the process of surgery and the likely outcomes. Multidisciplinary input from physicians (to diagnose comorbidity and improve it pre-operatively), dietitians and specialist nurses is essential. Busy units also need a full-time administrator to cope with the demands made on office time. Patients need to understand how band adjustments work, and the team needs to have sufficient infrastructure in place to provide support. More than six visits in the first year and the necessary infrastructure to achieve this are requirements for good weight loss(Reference Shen, Dugay and Rajaram20). Group education sessions have a vital role to ensure ‘buy-in’ of patients and families/friends into the process.

How do gastric bypass and banding work?

Almost universally, gastric-bypass patients lose their appetite and have much earlier satiety immediately after surgery. These findings are accompanied by reproducible marked rises in the levels of peptide YY and glucagon-like peptide 1(Reference le Roux, Welbourn and Werling21, Reference Pournaras, Osborne and Hawkins22). These gut hormones are thought to be central to the mechanism by which the brain perceives satiety signals from the gut. In a randomised trial, it was found that when patients were given somatostatin, which blocked peptide YY and glucagon-like peptide 1, they ate more when presented with a standard buffet meal, returning to their pre-bypass state(Reference le Roux, Welbourn and Werling21). In addition, dumping syndrome (abdominal pain and sweating associated with sugary foods) is said to be common and perhaps puts patients off sugary foods. Some evidence also suggests that taste and food preferences also change (C. le Roux, personal communication, 2009). A small gastric pouch, usually with no more than a 20 ml volume, probably ensures that food empties quickly into the small bowel. Emptying will be limited by the rate at which the jejunum beyond the gastric pouch can peristalse food distally. A standard short-limb bypass does not cause weight loss by malabsorption; in fact, constipation due to the reduced intake is normal and malnutrition is rare.

Gastric-band patients also feel early satiety, and when the band opening is adjusted to the so-called ‘sweet spot’ of optimal restriction they characteristically feel satisfied with small volumes and are not looking for food between meals. There is good evidence that banding is also a physiological operation. A randomised trial by Dixon and co-workers showed differences in satiety scores depending on fill volume(Reference Dixon, Dixon and O'Brien23), and another study by the same group showed that high ‘Readiness to Change’ scores made no difference to weight loss after 2 years(Reference Dixon, Laurie and Anderson24). Taken together, these mechanistic findings on bypass and banding suggest that the obese state is amenable to physiological manipulation (i.e. surgery) via mechanisms other than promoting malnutrition.

Obesity-related comorbidity

What happens in the non-operated patient

Why does motivational weight loss not work? Many studies, in particular those on very low energy diets, have shown that yo-yo dieting is associated with rebound weight regain. One of the factors that could account for this is the extreme hunger that follows intense dieting. Ghrelin, produced in the gastric fundus, has been identified as a hunger hormone and may be involved in this mechanism(Reference Bueter and le Roux25). Thus many individuals, once they have become obese, suffer a lifetime of repeated dieting and weight regain. Exhortations to eat less and exercise more are ineffective if a patient has missed the boat of prevention and is already in the state of chronic obesity(Reference Leff and Heath10). Indeed, if the BMI is >50, National Institute of Clinical Excellence guidance suggests referral for surgery as a first-line option(12).

The association between obesity and components of the metabolic syndrome such as type 2 diabetes, hypertension, sleep apnoea and also arthritis is well established(Reference Dixon, Pories and O'Brien26). Less well recognised is the association with cancer. Obesity is now considered probably the second commonest cause, after smoking. In data from the Cancer Prevention Study II in the USA from 1982 to 1998, the RR of death from cancer increased above a BMI of 30 for both men and women(Reference Adami and Trichopoulos27). In 900 000 individuals the risk of most, if not all, cancers was increased in non-smokers(Reference Calle, Rodriguez and Walker-Thurmond28). For women with BMI >40, there was an RR of 6·25 for uterine cancer, and the overall RR was 2·51 for other cancers, in particular kidney, cervix and pancreas. For men with BMI >35, there was an RR of 4·52 for liver cancer, and for BMI >30 the RR was 1·68 for all other cancers. Thus the impact of obesity appears to be important for most, if not all, organs.

Effect of bariatric surgery on comorbidity and mortality

Many reports in the surgical literature document the amelioration of obesity-related comorbidity after bariatric surgery(Reference Buchwald, Avidor and Braunwald29). Some of these studies have been criticised for having only short follow-up, limited to 1–2 years, and less than rigorous methodology for assessing progression of comorbidities over time. For instance, assessment of diabetes by medication usage is open to misinterpretation(Reference Buchwald, Avidor and Braunwald29). Thus a patient may remain on metformin because she has polycystic ovarian syndrome, although she is in diabetic remission. Conversely, a patient taken off medication inappropriately in the expectation that diabetes will reverse could still be diabetic. There need to be standard definitions of remission, and better agreement on how to document changes in other comorbidities over time(Reference Pournaras, Osborne and Hawkins30). Studies using more rigorous methodology are now emerging on the positive effects of bariatric surgery(Reference Pournaras, Osborne and Hawkins30).

A large study from Montreal demonstrated the effect of gastric bypass on 1035 patients, who were matched from the Quebec provincial health insurance database to 5746 controls(Reference Christou, Sampalis and Liberman31). The surgery patients had an average BMI of 50, and over the 5-year study, had a risk of dying of 0·68% v. 6·17% in the controls(Reference Christou, Sampalis and Liberman31). The surgery patients had fewer new diagnoses of cancer (2% v. 8%), fewer heart problems (5% v. 27%), a smaller risk of developing diabetes (9% v. 27%), fewer significant infections (9% v. 37%), less arthritis (5% v. 12%), fewer respiratory problems (3% v. 11%) and less overall time in hospital (21 d v. 36 d), all P<0·01(Reference Christou, Sampalis and Liberman31). The morbidity and case mix of these patients were probably comparable to the average patient seen in the National Health Service in the UK.

In a meta-analysis of 3201 operated patients followed for 2 years, there were differences observed in ‘resolution’ of diabetes between the two commonest operations, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass and adjustable gastric banding(Reference Buchwald, Avidor and Braunwald29). For diabetes, 83·8% of bypass patients were in remission compared to 47·8% for banding. When the term ‘improved’ was included, the figures rose to 90·6% for bypass and 80·2% for banding. A recent cohort comparison study used much stricter criteria for diabetes remission(Reference Pournaras, Osborne and Hawkins30). In this study, it was defined as fasting plasma glucose <7 mmol/l off all medication, 2 h fasting glucose <11·1 mmol/l OGTT (WHO definition) and HbA1c <6% after 3 months of the last hypoglycaemic agent usage(Reference Pournaras, Osborne and Hawkins30). Although the study was not randomised, the groups were well matched. At the latest follow-up, 72% of gastric bypass patients were in remission compared to 17% of banding patients (P<0·01)(Reference Pournaras, Osborne and Hawkins30). Bypass patients achieved fasting plasma glucose <7 mmol/l off all medication quicker than banding patients (hazard ratio (HR) 8·2, 95% CI 1·8, 36·7; P=0·001)(Reference Pournaras, Osborne and Hawkins30).

Other reports have shown that banding can also be effective in causing diabetes remission. In the only published randomised trial of banding v. best medical therapy for BMI 30–40, Dixon and co-workers found a 73% remission rate for the banded group v. 13% for the medical treatment group (RR 5·5, 95% CI 2·2, 14·0)(Reference Dixon, O'Brien and Playfair32). The differences in these findings can be explained by different severities of diabetes between the studies. Leaving this aside, it is clear that bariatric surgery has much to offer as best medical therapy controls diabetes but never puts it into remission.

In another large study in the USA, 11 903 surgery patients were matched to 11 901 controls selected from 190 448 Medicare patients matched for age, sex and comorbidity(Reference Perry, Hutter and Smith33). Recorded ICD-9 codes were used to document comorbidity prevalence. Over the 2 years of the study, the incidence of diabetes fell by 21%, sleep apnoea by 10%, hypertension by 21%, hyperlipidaemia by 30% and coronary artery disease by 32%, all statistically highly significant findings(Reference Perry, Hutter and Smith33).

In Sweden, a long-term non-randomised cohort study of the effect of bariatric surgery v. medical therapy was initiated in the 1980s(Reference Sjöström, Lindroos and Peltonen34). At the time, in the era of open surgery, bariatric surgery was considered too dangerous to allow ethical randomisation between this and best medical therapy. Thus in the Swedish Obese Subjects study, 2037 patients choosing not to have surgery were compared to 2010 surgical patients. Over a mean follow-up of 10·9 years (range 4·9–18·2), there was no significant weight loss in the medical group. By contrast, weight loss in the surgical groups, consisting of adjustable gastric banding, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass and vertical banded gastroplasty (an operation now replaced by banding), was between 13·2 and 25%. More importantly, there was a significant difference in mortality, with 129 control patients dying compared to 101 in the surgical group, HR 0·76 (95% CI 0·59, 0·99), with a time to reach significance (P<0·05) of 13 years(Reference Sjöström, Narbro and Sjöström35). This was the first prospective study to show that bariatric surgery confers survival benefit, even after the 90-d mortality rate from surgery of 0·25%(Reference Sjöström, Narbro and Sjöström35). It is of interest that many of the gastric banding and vertical-banded-gastroplasty patients were converted to bypass during the study period, so the results cannot be taken as evidence of the long-term effect of these individual operations on an intention-to-treat basis.

Another report also found survival benefit in a retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data(Reference Adams, Gress and Smith36). Using self-reported BMI data collected from driving licences in Utah, Adams and co-workers were able to match for age, sex and BMI 7925 patients who had undergone gastric bypass with 7925 controls(Reference Adams, Gress and Smith36). The study period was 1984–2002 and the mean follow-up was 7·1 years. Expressing mortality as deaths/10 000 patient years, 37·6 patients died in the years after surgery compared to 57·1 controls (40% reduction, P<0·001)(Reference Adams, Gress and Smith36). Disease-specific reductions in mortality were also seen for coronary artery disease (56% reduction, 2·6 v. 5·9, P=0·006), diabetes (92% reduction, 0·4 v. 3·4, P=0·005) and cancer (60% reduction, 5·5 v. 13·3, P=0·001). The post-surgical mortality at 1 year was 0·53%, which compared to 0·52% of controls dying in the same period(Reference Adams, Gress and Smith36).

The reports described confirmed survival benefit after mainly gastric bypass surgery. O'Brien and Dixon's group in Melbourne has also reported survival benefit after gastric banding(Reference Peeters, O'Brien and Laurie37). In a series of 966 operated patients followed up for 4 years, the HR for death was 0·28 (95% CI 0·10, 0·85) compared to a matched cohort of 2119 community controls followed up for 12 years(Reference Peeters, O'Brien and Laurie37).

Bariatric surgery is cost effective

Hospital and drug prescription costs

There is accumulating evidence that bariatric surgery is cost effective. The Montreal group reviewed the healthcare costs of 1035 bariatric surgery patients operated from 1986 with a 5-year follow-up to 2002 and compared them to 5746 age- and sex-matched controls(Reference Sampalis, Liberman and Auger38). All-cause hospitalisations were costed in 1996 CAD$ after and including the initial operation. After the outlay for the initial surgery, costs continued to rise, but by comparison the costs for the control patients, initially nearly zero, rose much more rapidly and in fact overtook those for surgery at 3·5 years(Reference Sampalis, Liberman and Auger38). With laparoscopic techniques, the equivalent cost would now almost certainly be less.

Another study from Alabama assessed drug prescription costs after gastric bypass, comparing them to the initial cost of surgery(Reference Snow, Weinstein and Hannon39). Thirty percent of those on obesity-related medication had stopped them by 1 year, and the average number of medications per patient fell by 66%(Reference Snow, Weinstein and Hannon39). Taking the surgery as a one-off cost, the crossover point for cost effectiveness was 2·5 years, with surgery favoured thereafter up to the 4-year follow-up point(Reference Snow, Weinstein and Hannon39).

The Health Technology Assessment report that informed the earlier, 2002 National Institute of Clinical Excellence Guidelines for bariatric surgery estimated that the incremental cost effectiveness ratios per quality-adjusted life year were £8527 for gastric banding and £6289 for gastric bypass(Reference Clegg, Colquitt and Sidhu40). Both of these are well below the threshold of £30 000 considered by the National Institute of Clinical Excellence to be cost effective, and they are therefore among the cheapest of interventions. The Health Technology Assessment report has recently updated its costing of the incremental cost effectiveness ratios to £2000–4000 per quality-adjusted life year gained(Reference Picot, Jones and Colquitt41). More recent data on cost effectiveness show clear benefits for diabetes(Reference Keating, Dixon and Moodie42).

Effect on paid work

Studies of cost effectiveness do not routinely consider the effect of bariatric surgery on subsequent employment potential or claims for state benefits. In a study in southwest England, fifty-nine patients were assessed a mean 14 months after surgery(Reference Hawkins, Osborne and Finlay2). The proportion in paid work after surgery rose from 58% to 76%, which was the same as the population average. Individuals worked 30·1 h per week on average before surgery and 35·8 h per week afterwards. The total time worked per week rose from 1023 to 1611 h, a 57% increase(Reference Hawkins, Osborne and Finlay2).

The study also examined self-reported benefit claims (Disability Living Allowance, Incapacity Benefit and Carer's Allowance). Thirty-two percent claimed benefit before surgery and this fell to 10% afterwards, similar to the average level of claims of 8·6% for the population. Similarly, the total number of benefits claimed fell by 75%(Reference Hawkins, Osborne and Finlay2). In an earlier Dutch study of 62 patients after bariatric surgery, unemployment improved from 53% pre-surgery to 80% afterwards, similar to the levels of employment in the UK study(Reference van Gemert, Adang and Greve43). The data therefore suggest economic benefit to the wider community from surgery.

Complications of surgery in the short and long term

Proponents of gastric banding cite very low mortality (1–2 per 1000 operations) as its principal benefit(Reference O'Brien, Dixon and Laurie44). Mortality from gastric bypass in high-volume centres should be no more than 0·5%, depending on peri-operative risk factors. Even with this mortality, gastric bypass is perceived as having a 10-fold higher risk of death than banding. However, in many reported studies, band patients have lower BMI and are therefore lower risk (with little or no comorbidity) compared to bypass series where the average BMI may be 7 or 8 points higher. Heavier patients therefore have more comorbidity and may do badly if there is a complication. As larger patients stand to gain much more from weight loss, higher mortality may be an acceptable trade-off. However, when the Swedish Obese Subjects study operative mortality was experimentally modelled at 6%, it became mathematically impossible for there to be survival benefit from surgery (L. Sjostrom, personal communication, 2008). Similarly, the Utah study above shows the importance of low operative mortality.

Therefore, to avoid comparing apples and oranges, data are needed on the risk of surgery on a like-for-like basis. The Obesity Surgery–Mortality Risk Score of de Maria has been proposed as just such a method to stratify risk for gastric bypass(Reference DeMaria, Murr and Byrne45). In this prospectively validated score, higher operative mortality is associated with age >45, BMI >50, male gender, hypertension (these two because of their association with central obesity and therefore more difficult surgery) and risk of deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism.

Every bariatric operation has a complication, revision and failure rate. For banding, reoperation rates are often quoted at 10–20% over 5–10 years due to band slippage, band infection (usually in port site), tubing or device fractures (usually due to needling injury during fill adjustment), and erosion (where the band erodes into the stomach)(Reference Suter, Calmes and Paroz46). Fortunately band erosion, the most serious of these complications, is the least common. Although these complication rates may be at variance with the often excellent published data, it is also clear that a substantial proportion of patients in many series are lost to follow-up. National registries are needed to collect data on the fate of bands on an intention-to-treat basis.

Adjustable gastric banding was introduced in 1986, and in Europe the enthusiasm for placing bands that prevailed in the 1990s has waned due to the perception that there is a high risk of long-term complications or failure to lose weight, with high removal rates. In many studies, the proportion of patients who fail to lose the first quartile of their excess weight is up to 15–20%(Reference Puzziferri, Nakonezny and Livingston47). Thus many patients have conversions to gastric bypass due to ‘band intolerance’. By contrast there is now huge enthusiasm for gastric banding in the US, where FDA approval for the procedure was achieved only in 2001.

The main short-term risk of gastric bypass is the operation itself. Provided the patient leaves hospital without a complication (which after the learning curve carries a risk of a few percent only), then the later reoperation rate is low. The proportion of patients failing to lose the first quarter of their excess weight is <5%(Reference Nguyen, Slone and Nguyen15, Reference Puzziferri, Nakonezny and Livingston47). In the vast majority, it seems that weight loss is achieved irrespective of outpatient attendance and team infrastructure (although this has not been subjected to randomised study compared to banding). There is some weight regain after the nadir that is reached at about 12–18 months. The Montreal group has shown durable weight loss to at least 15 years after this(Reference Christou, Look and Maclean48). However, for a procedure that was introduced in 1967 it is a shortcoming in the literature that there are so few long-term follow-up studies.

The biggest challenge for gastric bypass is getting through the learning curve(Reference Shikora, Kim and Tarnoff49Reference Pournaras, Jafferbhoy and Titcomb51). Excess mortality during this time defeats the point of the surgery. Start-up units and surgeons should therefore be mentored. The learning curve is challenging because techniques to join bowel laparoscopically are not common in the surgical repertoire. Therefore surgeons are learning these techniques in a situation where even a small leak can have catastrophic consequences.

In addition, opening up of internal hernias caused by the anatomic rearrangement (Petersen's defect, jejuno-jejunostomy defect +/−trans-mesocolic defect) as the patient loses weight predisposes to small bowel obstruction. Many view sewing up the defects preventively as a standard part of the operation in order to avoid the potentially disastrous consequences of obstruction with gangrene of the bowel years after bypass.

Centres of Excellence: improving outcomes of surgery

Increasing specialisation has been shown to reduce complications and mortality in every area of major surgery, and bariatric surgery is no different(Reference Courcoulas, Schuchert and Gatti52, Reference Flum and Dellinger53). Although the data on hospital volume and specialisation all refer to gastric bypass, it seems likely that high-volume gastric band centres will also have better outcomes because of better infrastructure for intensive follow-up. Data from the Longitudinal Assessment of Bariatric Surgery study in the USA confirm better outcomes for gastric bypass for higher-volume surgeons(Reference Smith, Patterson and Wahed54).

In a drive to improve standards after well-reported high cost claims for complications after surgery, the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery established criteria and an infrastructure to create Centres of Excellence(55). Since 2007, more than 700 surgeons and 400 hospitals in the USA have been awarded Centre of Excellence status. The rigorous application process was designed to ensure the highest achievable standards of care. Each hospital must have a minimum annual volume of 125 cases, at least two surgeons on the on-call rota, and a designated lead, full-time bariatric surgeon. The priority of the approval process is a site visit and a 10% random notes review. Standards for follow-up are also specified so that at least 75% of patients should be seen annually.

In June 2009, the results of 57 918 patients entered into the Centre of Excellence database were published on-line: the commonest operations were gastric bypass (54·8%) followed by gastric banding (39·8%)(Reference Smith, Patterson and Wahed54). Overall, 10·77% of patients had an adverse event after surgery, mainly minor, with nausea/vomiting being the commonest. The overall mortality rate was 0·135%. Presently, no further procedure-specific data are available.

In Europe, a similar Centre of Excellence process is being initiated(Reference Melissas56). In the UK, the National Bariatric Surgery Registry (www.nbsr.org.uk) was created in 2009, and in its first year had already accumulated more than 6000 operated patients. It is hoped that all surgeons performing surgery in the UK will contribute their patient data so that national outcomes can be known.

Long-term nutritional consequences of bariatric surgery

The first bariatric operation, jejuno-ileal bypass, which originated nearly 50 years ago, is rightly obsolete due to its many side effects. These were due to the small bowel blind-loop created, which led to liver damage, osteomalacia and osteoporosis(Reference Jørgensen, Olesen and Gudman-Høyer57). Procedures with a malabsorptive element such as biliopancreatic diversion and duodenal switch and DS are associated with a higher risk for nutritional complications compared to gastric banding, gastric bypass and sleeve gastrectomy where significant protein and energy malabsorption is rare.

Gastric bypass and banding

Fe, Ca, Mg and Zn are normally absorbed in the duodenum and proximal jejunum, and their absorption is decreased in gastric bypass. With a normal small bowel length of perhaps 9 m, protein and energy malnutrition is rarely seen after standard gastric bypass where the biliopancreatic limb is kept short, often 20–30 cm, and usually no longer than 75 cm. Similarly, the Roux limb, routed to the new gastric pouch and joined downstream to the end of the biliopancreatic limb in a ‘Y’, is usually kept between 75 and 150 cm. ‘Long-limb’ bypass (limbs 200 cm each) carries a much higher risk of malnutrition but is rarely performed (biliopancreatic diversion duodenal switch would be preferred if the intention was to create protein and energy malabsorption).

It is considered mandatory that all gastric bypass patients take lifelong dietary supplementation of minerals. The daily percentages of the RDA that should be taken are Fe (50%), Ca (100%), Zn (33%), Cu (50%) and Se (33%)(Reference Pournaras and le Roux58). In addition, bypass patients should take multivitamins that include vitamins A, D, E (all 100%), K (25%), B group (all 150–300%), B12 (300%) and C (200%) and folate. About one in three patients need added vitamin B12 injections, and some clinicians prefer to prescribe this to all patients. Specific deficiencies of vitamins A, E and K are rare(Reference Davies, Baxter and Baxter59, Reference Bloomberg, Fleishman, Nalle, Herron and Kini60).

Bypass patients should have blood tests regularly to search for deficiencies. According to the European Association for Endoscopic Surgery guidelines, patients should be seen between three and eight times in the first year after surgery, one to four times in the second year and once or twice annually thereafter(Reference Sauerland, Angrisani and Belachew61). Blood count, urea and electrolytes, liver function tests, parathormone, iron indices, B12 and folate should be measured at each follow-up. Dosages of regular medication should also be reviewed, as alternatives may be needed for drugs that are absorbed in an acid environment. For instance with phenytoin, under-dosage may result(Reference Pournaras, Footitt, Mahon and Welbourn62). Recommendations for banding are similar to bypass, as vitamin deficiency, though infrequent, may occur with the decreased food intake. However, vitamin levels probably do not need long-term monitoring.

Vitamin D deficiency is increasingly recognised as being associated with obesity. Ca supplements alone are insufficient to protect from osteoporosis. In a study of bypass patients from Nebraska it was found that 61% were vitamin D deficient compared to 12% of non-obese controls, and as many as 49% had secondary hyperparathyroidism compared to 2% of controls(Reference Goldner, Stoner, Thompson, Taylor, Larson, Erickson and McBride63). The findings were not explained by a difference in vitamin D or Ca levels, Ca intake or sunlight exposure. Long-term data (>10 years) on bone mineral deficiency are lacking after gastric bypass, but reassuringly there are no reports of increased fracture rates(Reference Sjöström, Narbro and Sjöström35).

Future areas for surgery and research

Fundamental questions that need answering include why obesity leads to insulin resistance, diabetes, cancer and infertility. Surgery for adolescents is increasing and needs careful study(Reference O'Brien, Sawyer and Laurie64). Surgery for diabetes is also likely to increase. The current BMI level for surgery (1991 National Institutes of Health guidelines) uses an arbitrary cut-off of 35. The Diabetes Surgery Consensus Summit (Rome 2007) suggested that ‘surgery should be considered for the treatment of diabetes’ in patients with a BMI of 35 or more ‘who are inadequately controlled by lifestyle and medical therapy’. Further, surgery may also be appropriate for the treatment of people with type 2 diabetes and BMI 30–35(Reference Rubino, Kaplan and Schauer65). If clinicians believe in and adopt these guidelines, the floodgates could open for surgery.

To put the effect of bariatric surgery into the context of cancer, the recent Swedish Obese Subjects study data showed a 33% fall in the incidence of cancer over 18 years after surgery (P=0·0009). Compare this to statin therapy, universally accepted as a mainstay of treatment for prevention of CVD, which gives at maximum a 20% RR reduction in fatal or non-fatal heart attacks(Reference Sjöström, Gummesson and Sjöström66, Reference Preiss and Sattar67).

Conclusions and summary

Despite the accumulating evidence in favour of bariatric surgery, there is still reticence among many clinicians to refer patients. How should this be challenged? Dr Henry Buchwald in his presidential address to the American Society for Bariatric Surgery in 2004 said that ‘there are no surgical or medical diseases: there are just conditions and treatments’. At the Diabetes Surgery Summit Dr Ricardo Cohen, a Brazilian surgeon, went further when he said, ‘if there would be one pill that keeps weight down and resolves type 2 diabetes mellitus (and other comorbidities) for at least 15–20 years, with low morbidity and mortality and impressive decrease in long-term mortality, its inventor would probably deserve a Nobel prize’. That view is just as true now, and all who are involved in the delivery of healthcare to our increasingly obese population should embrace and propagate it.

Acknowledgements

The authors declare no conflicts of interest and received no financial support.

This paper is based on the invited lecture that R.W. gave to BAPEN in Cardiff, October 2009. R.W. was primarily responsible for researching, writing and editing the paper, which was reviewed by D.J.P., who contributed equally to the intellectual content.

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