Research Alert

Abstract

Introduction:

Perioperative outcomes of bariatric surgery in patients with super super obesity (SSO) (BMI ≥ 60 kg/m2) merit further investigation.

Methods:

A retrospective review was conducted of patients with SSO who underwent surgery from Jun 2005 through Jun 2018 at a Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Center of Excellence. Quantitative demographic data was summarized using descriptive statistics; categorical variables were compared using Fisher’s exact test.

Results:

Two hundred fourteen procedures were performed, of which 208 were eligible for inclusion. Majority were female (65.4%). The mean age and BMI was 43 (17–68 years) and 65.9 kg/m2 (60 95 kg/m2), respectively. Comorbidities included: obstructive sleep apnea (74%), hypertension (59%), gastro-esophageal reflux disease (43%), osteoarthritis (41%), and diabetes mellitus (30%). Surgical approach: 97 Roux-en-Y gastric bypasses (46%), 88 laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomies (42%), and 23 adjustable gastric bands (11%). Additional subset included: primary (87%), conversion (7.7%), and revision (5.3%); majority being laparoscopic (75%) and robotic (24%). Complications via Clavien-Dindo classification: one Grade I, one Grade II, three Grade IIIa, three Grade IIIb, and three Grade IVa. Thirty-day events: 11 complications (5.3%; one leak [0.5%], one deep vein thrombosis [0.5%]), six re-admissions (3%), four re-operations (2%): repair of staple-line leak, repair of incisional hernia, uterine dilation and curettage, and cholecystectomy. No mortalities occurred. Complications occurred in 14.8% of conversion/revision cases, 3.9% in primary cases (p = 0.0395) with no difference observed between laparoscopic (4.5%) and robotic (6.1%) modalities (p =0.7051).

Conclusion:

Bariatric surgery is feasible in patients with SSO. Revision procedures may increase risk of operative complications.

Journal Link: Howell, R., Liu, H., Boinpally, H., Akerman, M., Carruthers, E., Brathwaite, B., Petrone, P., Brathwaite, C. (2020). Outcomes of Bariatric Surgery: Patients with Body Mass Index 60 or Greater. Manuscript accepted for publication to Journal of the Society of Laparoscopic Surgery