Back to Search Start Over

Can Metabolite and Hormone Profiles Provide a Rationale for Choosing Between Bariatric Procedures?

Authors :
Mário Nora
Mariana P. Monteiro
Jens J. Holst
Sofia S Pereira
Marta Guimarães
Source :
Obesity Surgery. 31:2174-2179
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

There are no formal guidelines for choosing among different bariatric surgery procedures for obesity treatment. So, our aim was to evaluate whether post-absorptive metabolite and hormone profiles could aid the surgeon decision when considering bariatric surgery interventions. Subjects (N=38) previously submitted to biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch (BPD-DS, n=9), single anastomosis duodenal–ileum bypass with sleeve gastrectomy (SADI-S, n= 9), long biliopancreatic limb Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB-M, n= 11), and classic RYGB (RYGB-C, n= 9) underwent a mixed meal test to evaluate post-absorptive glucose, total amino acid (AA), insulin, and GLP-1 profiles. Glucose, AA, insulin, and GLP-1 excursions were lower after BPD-DS when compared to other surgeries. SADI-S resulted in lower glucose but similar AA and insulin excursions when compared to RYGB-M. The highest GLP-1 excursion was observed after RYGB-M. There were no significant differences in glucose or AA post-prandial excursions between RYGB procedures, yet insulin excursion was higher after RYGB-C when compared to RYGB-M. Post-prandial metabolite excursions diverge across bariatric procedures being lowest after BPD-DS, intermediate after SADI-S, and highest after RYGB, in parallel with the anti-diabetic efficacy and malabsorption risk reported for each type of intervention. SADI-S and RYGB-M seem to elicit similar post-prandial hormonal profiles, with potentially lower risk of protein malnutrition when compared to BPD-DS. Post-absorptive metabolite and hormone profiles could provide a rationale as decision-aid when choosing among bariatric surgery interventions, as long as these findings are validated in future trials.

Details

ISSN :
17080428 and 09608923
Volume :
31
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Obesity Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5813cc104a827a0cead27963fcc4aeac
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11695-021-05246-8