NATIONAL HARBOR, MD. -- Patients with type 2 diabetes who have
undergone laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery might experience
a significant drop in hemoglobin [A.sub.1c] levels to below the cutoff
value recommended in guidelines, according to a retrospective study.
The procedure maintained its effect through 3 years of follow-up,
during which the patients significantly lowered their use of oral
hypoglycemic agents and insulin. More than half (53%) of the gastric
bypass patients available for follow-up after 3 years experienced
remission of their diabetes.
In comparison, an age- and gender-matched cohort of medically
managed patients with type 2 diabetes who did not undergo surgery
developed worsening hemoglobin [A.sub.1c]([HbA.sub.1c]) levels and
significantly increased use of oral hypoglycemic agents and insulin
during a similar time frame.
"Based on our findings, we feel that bariatric surgery should
be considered a first-line treatment option for obese patients with type
2 diabetes," Dr. Daniel E. Mumme said at the annual meeting of the
American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.
The study that Dr. Mumme presented for his colleagues at Gundersen
Lutheran Medical Center, La Crosse, Wis., compared the outcomes of 51
patients with type 2 diabetes who underwent laparoscopic Rouxen-Y
gastric bypass at the center during 2001-2005 and 51 medically managed
patients with type 2 diabetes who were identified within a family
practice database. Patients in both groups had a mean age of 48 years,
and 78% were female.
Among 48 surgical patients with [HbA.sub.1c] values recorded after
1 year of follow-up, mean [HbA.sub.1c] levels significantly dropped from
7.5% before surgery to 5.8%. The 29 patients who had 3-year follow-up
data had a significant drop in mean [HbA.sub.1c] levels from 7.8% before
surgery to 6.1%. [HbA.sub.1c] levels increased from 7% to 7.8% over a
3-year period in 39 patients of the medically managed comparison cohort.
The current treatment guidelines of the American Diabetes Association
recommend lowering [HbA.sub.1c] levels below 7%.
Data from a study of the association of [HbA.sub.1c] with
cardiovascular disease and mortality in adults showed that a percentage
point increase in [HbA.sub.1c] was associated with a 20%-30% increase in
cardiovascular events or total mortality (Ann. Intern. Med.
2004;141:413-20). In another study, each percentage point drop in
[HbA.sub.1c] was tied to a 37% decline in the risk of microvascular
complications (BMJ 2000;321:405-12).
In the current study, the surgical patients lost a mean of 103
pounds, or 68% of their excess weight, at 1 year. The body mass index
(BMI) of surgical patients dropped from a mean of 48 kg/[m.sup.2] before
surgery to a BMI of 31 after 1 year. Nonsurgical patients initially had
a mean BMI of 45.
Among surgical patients, the use of oral hypoglycemic agents
significantly declined from 77% at baseline to 18% at 1 year and 22% at
3 years. In comparison, oral hypoglycemic use in conventionally treated
patients rose from 67% at baseline to 82% at 1 year, remaining stable to
3 years. In both groups, insulin use followed the same trends as oral
hypoglycemic agents. At 3 years, 26% of gastric bypass patients used
oral hypoglycemic agents and / or insulin, compared with 82% of
conventionally treated patients. Remission of diabetes (defined as an
[HbA.sub.1c] less than 6% and off diabetic medications) occurred at 1
year in 59% of surgical patients and in 35% of conventionally treated
patients.
Of the 51 surgical patients, the 31 who had gone into remission at
some point during the 3 years of follow-up had had diabetes for a mean
of 4.1 years--shorter than the mean duration for the 20 patients who
never remitted (7.9 years). Overall, surgical patients had a slightly
longer mean duration of diabetes than did non surgical patients, said
Dr. Mumme, who did not have any disclosures to make for himself or his
coinvestigators.
BY JEFF EVANS
Senior Writer
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