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Preoperative Depression Status and Five Year Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Outcomes in the PCORnet Bariatric Study Cohort

Authors :
Janelle W, Coughlin
Elizabeth, Nauman
Robert, Wellman
R Yates, Coley
Kathleen M, McTigue
Karen J, Coleman
Daniel B, Jones
Kristina, Lewis
Jonathan N, Tobin
Christina C, Wee
Stephanie L, Fitzpatrick
Jay R, Desai
Sameer, Murali
Ellen H, Morrow
Ann M, Rogers
G Craig, Wood
David G, Schlundt
Caroline M, Apovian
Meredith C, Duke
James C, McClay
Rohit, Soans
Rabih, Nemr
Neely, Williams
Anita, Courcoulas
John H, Holmes
Jane, Anau
Sengwee, Toh
Jessica L, Sturtevant
Casie E, Horgan
Andrea J, Cook
David E, Arterburn
Source :
Annals of surgery.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

To examine whether depression status before metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS) influenced 5-year weight loss, diabetes, and safety/utilization outcomes in the PCORnet Bariatric Study.Research on the impact of depression on MBS outcomes is inconsistent with few large, long-term studies.Data were extracted from 23 health systems on 36,871 patients who underwent sleeve gastrectomy (SG; n=16,158) or gastric bypass (RYGB; n=20,713) from 2005-2015. Patients with and without a depression diagnosis in the year prior to MBS were evaluated for % total weight loss (%TWL), diabetes outcomes, and postsurgical safety/utilization (reoperations, revisions, endoscopy, hospitalizations, mortality) at 1, 3 and 5 years after MBS.27.1% of SG and 33.0% of RYGB patients had preoperative depression, and they had more medical and psychiatric comorbidities than those without depression. At 5 years of follow-up, those with depression, versus those without depression, had slightly less %TWL after RYGB, but not after SG (between group difference = 0.42%TWL, p=0.04). However, patients with depression had slightly larger HbA1c improvements after RYGB but not after SG (between group difference = -0.19, p=0.04). Baseline depression did not moderate diabetes remission or relapse, reoperations, revision, or mortality across operations; however, baseline depression did moderate the risk of endoscopy and repeat hospitalization across RYGB versus SG.Patients with depression undergoing RYGB and SG had similar weight loss, diabetes, and safety/utilization outcomes to those without depression. The effects of depression were clinically small compared to the choice of operation.

Details

ISSN :
15281140
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of surgery
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........1692443c10e0e6e9670c8fa9fdc26133