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Wednesday, March 30, 2011

IDF Endorses Early Bariatric Surgery

Return on Investment Make Gastric Bypass Cost-Effective, Claims Position Statement Issued at 2nd World Congress on Interventional Therapies for Type 2 Diabetes


The International Diabetes Federation (IDF) has issued a "radical statement" at an international conference today saying gastric banding and similar surgeries should no longer be a last resort for severely obese people with type 2 diabetes, it is recommending that surgery be considered at a much earlier stage.

"The statement highlights that there is increasing evidence that the health of obese people with type 2 diabetes, including their glucose control and other obesity related comorbidities (conditions), can benefit substantially from bariatric surgery under certain circumstances," says the IDF press release.

The IDF says gastric banding and other surgeries to alter stomach anatomy should now be considered much earlier in the treatment of type 2 diabetes.
Gastric bypass surgery works by reducing the size of the stomach so a person can't eat as much and shortening the length of the intestine so that the body doesn't absorb too many calories. But it might also have the side effect of normalizing blood sugar.

Summary of the 39-Page Statement
• Obesity and type 2 diabetes are serious chronic diseases associated with complex metabolic dysfunctions that increase the risk for morbidity and mortality.
• The dramatic rise in the prevalence of obesity and diabetes has become a major global public health issue and demands urgent attention from governments, health care systems and the medical community.
• Continuing population-based efforts are essential to prevent the onset of obesity and type 2 diabetes. At the same time, effective treatment must also be available for people who have developed type 2 diabetes
• Faced with the escalating global diabetes crisis, health care providers require as potent an armamentarium of therapeutic interventions as possible.
• In addition to behavioral and medical approaches, various types of surgery on the gastrointestinal tract, originally developed to treat morbid obesity (“bariatric surgery”), constitute powerful options to ameliorate diabetes in severely obese patients, often normalizing blood glucose levels, reducing or avoiding the need for medications and providing a potentially cost-effective approach to treating the disease.
• Bariatric surgery is an appropriate treatment for people with type 2 diabetes and obesity not achieving recommended treatment targets with medical therapies, especially when there are other major co-morbidities.
• Surgery should be an accepted option in people who have type 2 diabetes and a BMI of 35 or more
• Surgery should be considered as an alternative treatment option in patients with a BMI between 30 and 35 when diabetes cannot be adequately controlled by optimal medical regimen, especially in the presence of other major cardiovascular disease risk factors.2
• In Asian, and some other ethnicities of increased risk, BMI action points may be reduced by 2.5 kg/m
• Clinically severe obesity is a complex and chronic medical condition. Societal prejudices about severe obesity, which also exist within the health care system, should not act as a barrier to the provision of clinically effective and cost-effective treatment options.
• Strategies to prioritize access to surgery may be required to ensure that the procedures are available to those most likely to benefit.
• Available evidence indicates that bariatric surgery for obese patients with type 2 diabetes is cost-effective.
• Bariatric surgery for type 2 diabetes must be performed within accepted international and national guidelines. This requires appropriate assessment for the procedure and comprehensive and ongoing multidisciplinary care, patient education, follow-up and clinical audit, as well as safe and effective surgical procedures. National guidelines for bariatric surgery in people with type 2 diabetes and a BMI of 35 or more need to be developed and promulgated.
• The morbidity and mortality associated with bariatric surgery is generally low, and similar to that of well-accepted procedures such as elective gall bladder or gall stone surgery.
• Bariatric surgery in severely obese patients with type 2 diabetes has a range of health benefits, including a reduction in all-cause mortality.
• A national registry of persons who have undergone bariatric surgery should be established in order to ensure quality patient care and to monitor both short and long-term outcomes. 1.17 In order to optimize the future use of bariatric surgery as a therapeutic modality for type 2 diabetes further research is required.
Although such operations cost anywhere from $20,000 to $30,000, they will reduce healthcare expenditures in the long run, according to a new IDF position paper on the subject. The surgery, the IDF explains, often normalizes blood glucose levels and reduces or avoids the need for medication.

In addition, curbing diabetes can stave off costly complications such as blindness, limb amputations, and dialysis, says Francesco Rubino, MD, director of the IDF's 2nd World Congress on Interventional Therapies for Type 2 Diabetes.

"When we talk about whether we can afford bariatric surgery, we have to ask what will be the cost if we don't treat the patient. Studies have shown the surgery to be cost-effective. So there is a return on investment," says Francesco Rubino, MD, director of the IDF's 2nd World Congress on Interventional Therapies for Type 2 Diabetes

The IDF puts the lifetime cost of diabetes in the United States at $172,000 for a person diagnosed at age 50 years and $305,000 at age 30 years. More than 60% of this amount is incurred in the first 10 years after diagnosis.

The new recommended indications for performing bariatric surgery on patients who are both diabetic and obese match those announced last month by the US Food and Drug Administration for expanded use of the Lap-Band Adjustable Gastric Banding System (Allergan) to treat obesity.

The IDF recommendations dovetail with Dr Rubino’s previous research on how bariatric surgery alleviates diabetes. He showed that the effect on diabetes is not entirely explained by a person’s weight loss. In fact, the gastrointestinal tract serves as an endocrine organ and a key player in the regulation of insulin secretion, body weight and appetite, which is why altering the GI tract has such profound metabolic effects.

However, the use of bariatric surgery to treat diabetes has sparked controversy in healthcare circles. Critics question the wisdom of wielding a scalpel to solve a medical problem, especially when clinicians have more drugs at their disposal to deal with diabetes.

A study published online last week in the Archives of Surgery has raised doubts about the efficacy of LAGB. Researchers following 151 patients who underwent LAGB for obesity concluded that the procedure yielded "relatively poor long-term outcomes," with nearly half the patients needing their bands removed and 60% overall requiring some kind of reoperation. The authors, who performed the surgeries in question during the mid-1990s, added a caveat: they had used an older dissection technique.

Indeed, the biggest danger is that new weight-loss options likeEndoBarrier (developed in the UK), Lap-Band, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass and sleeve gastrectomy surgery have the potential to encourage overweight people to abandon traditional diet and exercise for procedures that carry some serious risks. That should be a big worry for all diabetes educators and activists.

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