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Predicting success of metabolic surgery: age, body mass index, C-peptide, and duration score

Authors :
Kyung Yul Hur
Simon Kin Hung Wong
Kong-Han Ser
Yi-Chih Lee
Shu-Chun Chen
Muffazal Lakadawala
Wei-Jei Lee
Kazunori Kasama
Source :
Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases. 9:379-384
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2013.

Abstract

Surgery is the most effective treatment of morbid obesity and leads to dramatic improvements in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Gastrointestinal metabolic surgery has been proposed as a treatment option for T2DM. However, a grading system to categorize and predict the outcome of metabolic surgery is lacking. The study setting was a tertiary referral hospital (Taoyuan City, Taoyuan County, Taiwan).We first evaluated 63 patients and identified 4 factors that predicted the success of T2DM remission after bariatric surgery in this cohort: body mass index, C-peptide level, T2DM duration, and patient age. We used these variables to construct the Diabetes Surgery Score, a multidimensional 10-point scale along which greater scores indicate a better chance of T2DM remission. We then validated the index in a prospective collected cohort of 176 patients, using remission of T2DM at 1 year after surgery as the outcome variable.A total of 48 T2DM remissions occurred among the 63 patients and 115 remissions (65.3%) in the validation cohort. Patients with T2DM remission after surgery had a greater Diabetes Surgery Score than those without (8 ± 4 versus 4 ± 4, P.05). Patients with a greater Diabetes Surgery Score also had a greater rate of success with T2DM remission (from 33% at score 0 to 100% at score 10); A 1-point increase in the Diabetes Surgery Score translated to an absolute 6.7% in the success rate.The Diabetes Surgery Score is a simple multidimensional grading system that can predict the success of T2DM treatment using bariatric surgery among patients with inadequately controlled T2DM.

Details

ISSN :
15507289
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7c81e587be9ed18caf698def896f1110
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soard.2012.07.015