Title: Is surgery better
1Is surgery better?
- Bariatric surgery versus medical management in
type 2 diabetes mellitus
Jordan Kautz, MS IV Ambulatory Care Conference,
Jan 08 UNC-CH School of Medicine
2For the soon-to-be medical resident
- LUKE SKYWALKER Is the dark side stronger?
- YODA No, no, no. Quicker, easier, more
seductive. - Empire Strikes Back (1980)
3Quasi-hypothetical case
- Mr. A, 48-year-old male, pmhx significant for
htn, hyperlipidemia, dm, and obesity (BMI 35)
presents for diabetes f/u. DM dxd 03. Tried
diet, exercise. Metformin. Glipizide. Most
recent A1c 8.6 despite optimal mgmt. - Add third agent? Insulin? Other ideas?
- Doc, what about that weight loss surgery?
- In addition to weight loss (and perhaps as a
result), what health benefits accrue secondary to
bariatric surgery for such a patient?
4Another quasi-hypothetical case
- Mrs. B, 35-year-old female, pmhx significant only
for obesity (BMI 39), presents c new dx type 2
dm. Battling wt since college. Not started any
meds. Baseline A1c 7.8. Father c dm, on
insulin, good control. Sister underwent gastric
banding, good result. - Recommendations?
- I heard on the news gastric banding can cure
diabetes if done earlyis that right? - For new diagnosis type 2 dm patients (preserved
pancreatic beta-cell function), is there
recovery from diabetes and might it be
clinically significant?
5Med Student Reasoning
- Twin public health epidemics
- Not all diabetics are obese and not all obese
persons have diabetes, butDIABESITY?!?! - Early and intensive treatment of diabetes
improves health outcomes, quality of life - Weight loss improves blood glucose control,
morbidity and mortality - Bariatric surgery leads to greater weight loss
than therapeutic lifestyle change (in most cases
but not without assuming greater risks) - Observational studies suggest that surgically
induced weight loss may be an effective treatment
for type 2 diabetes mellitus, especially
proximally
6What How it (might) work (we think)
- Not talking about one procedure
- Laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding (LAGB),
roux-en-Y, biliary-pancreatic diversion - Each procedure involves different risks,
benefits, and metabolic consequences - Purely a secondary outcome of surgically-induced
wt loss - Foregut hypothesis Improved diabetic control by
excluding the duodenum and proximal jejunum from
nutrient flow - Hindgut hypothesis More rapid delivery of
nutrients to distal intestine results in improved
glucose metabolism (via GLP-1, other peptides) - Questions re safety, invasiveness,
cost-effectiveness - Underrepresented as treatment option in ADA
guidelines, recommendations by similar bodies
7First RCT hot off the press
- Dixon JB, OBrien PE, Playfair J, et al.
Adjustable gastric banding and conventional
therapy for type 2 diabetes A randomized
controlled trial. JAMA 2008 299(3)316-23 - PICO For adults, age 20-60, BMI 30-40, and T2DM
dxd w/i two yrs, does LAGB compared to wt loss
by lifestyle change lead to increased remission
of type 2 diabetes (FPGlt126, A1c lt6.2, no
glycemic rx)?
8Study Population (n60)
- Inclusion Age 20-60, BMI 30-40, Dxd c T2DM w/i
2yrs and NO evidence of renal impairment,
diabetic retinopathy - Exclusion T1DM, DM secondary to specific dz,
previous bariatric surgery, h/o mental
impairment, drug or EtOH addiction, recent major
vascular event, internal malignancy, portal HTN
9Study Design
- Run-in to maximize current mgmt and assess
compliance - NON-blinded computer randomization
- Table 1 appears successful
- Conventional treatment GP, dietitian, nurse,
diabetes educator visit c at least 1 team member
q6wks during 2yrs diet physical activity
requirements - Not treated according to standardized
algorithmoptimal (?) management - Surgical program ALL aspects of conventional rx
PLUS LAGB progress reviewed by bariatric surgery
team q4-6wks adjustments to band volume using
standard clinical criteria - Highly experienced, specialized surgical
groupreproducible (?) success
10Study Metrics
- Primary Proportion of patients achieving
remission (as previously defined) - Secondary change in A1c, wt, bp, waist
circumference, lipids, change in medication use,
proportion of pts c metabolic syndrome, change in
direct measures of insulin resistance
11Results
- Diabetes remission 73 (surgical) versus 13
(medical), plt0.001 - Greater percentage of wt loss at two yrs and
lower baseline A1c values were independently
associated with remission - Percentage of weight loss explained most of the
variance - 20 (surgical) versus 1.4 (medical), plt0.001
12Primary and Secondary Outcomes at 2 Years
STATISTICALLY significant improvements in
secondary end points though the study was NOT
powered to assess multiple outcome
measures Adverse events (surgical group) included
superficial wound infection, gastric pouch
enlargement requiring nonurgent revision, and
band removal Minor events (surgical group)
included postop fever, hypoglycemic episode, and
GI intolerance to metformin
13Limitations
- Restricted to recent diagnosis diabetes
- Results may not apply to those with longer hx of
dz due to deterioration of beta-cell fxn - Sample size and duration of follow-up
- More diverse population and longer f/u to see if
benefits persist, evaluate hard end points
14Ladies first
- Based on this study, its strengths and
limitations, what would you say to Mrs. B? - What in the literature or about the patient would
be persuasive in recommending LAGB? - Should the bariatric surgeon be on speed dial for
all newly diagnosed diabetics when diet and
exercise fail?
15Swedish Obese Subjects (SOS)
- Study design Prospective, nonrandomized
intervention trial (2y n4,047 10y n1,703) - Intervention Fixed or variable banding, vertical
banded gastroplasty, gastric bypass compared to
customary treatment (non-standardized including
no treatment) - Subjects Obese subjects who underwent gastric
surgery and contemporaneously matched,
conventionally treated obese control subjects - Inclusion BMIgt34 (M), gt38 (F), Age 37-60
- Exclusion Not well detailed, available
elsewhere
16And the winners are
TWO YEARS -23.4 (surgical) 0.1 (control) TEN
YEARS-16.1 (surgical) 1.6 (control)
17Effect on incidence of and recovery from risk
conditions (1)
18Effect on incidence of and recovery from risk
conditions (2)
19Questions
- What biologically plausible mechanism might
account for more successful recovery from than
incidence of hypertension, dyslipidemia? - Does dichotomizing variables (or interventions
for that matter) obscure information that may be
meaningful for clinical practice? Patient health
outcomes?
20Getting back to the other guy
- Based on this study, its strengths and
limitations, what would you say to Mr. A? - Is a disease-free interval likely to pay
dividends for this gentleman years later (when we
know micro- and macro-vascular complications
operate on such a time scale)? - Yeah, well, but what if he just looks and feels
great?
21References
- Dixon JB, OBrien PE, Playfair J, et al.
Adjustable gastric banding and conventional
therapy for type 2 diabetes A randomized
controlled trial. JAMA 2008 299(3)316-23 - Sjostrom L, Lindroos AK, Peltonen M, et al.
Lifestyle, diabetes, and cardiovascular risk
factors 10 years after bariatric surgery. NEJM
2004 351(26)2683-93 - Buchwald H, Avidor Y, Braunwald E, et al.
Bariatric surgery a systematic review and
meta-analysis. JAMA 2004 292(14) 1724-37 - Ferchak CV and Meneghini LF. Obesity, bariatric
surgery, and type 2 diabetesa systematic review.
Diabetes Metab Res Rev 2004 20(6)438-45 - Dixon JB, Pories WJ, OBrien PE, et al. Surgery
as an effective early intervention for diabesity
why the reluctance? Diabetes Care 2005
28(2)472-4 - Chapman AE, Kiroff G, Game P. LAGB in the
treatment of obesity a systematic literature
review. Surgery 2004 135326-51 - PubMed search bariatric surgery MeSH AND
diabetes mellitus, type 2 MeSH, limits
English (134 articles)