| Literature DB >> 21480973 |
J B Dixon1, P Zimmet, K G Alberti, F Rubino.
Abstract
The International Diabetes Federation Taskforce on Epidemiology and Prevention of Diabetes convened a consensus working group of diabetologists, endocrinologists, surgeons and public health experts to review the appropriate role of surgery and other gastrointestinal interventions in the treatment and prevention of Type 2 diabetes. The specific goals were: to develop practical recommendations for clinicians on patient selection; to identify barriers to surgical access and suggest interventions for health policy changes that ensure equitable access to surgery when indicated; and to identify priorities for research. Bariatric surgery can significantly improve glycaemic control in severely obese patients with Type 2 diabetes. It is an effective, safe and cost-effective therapy for obese Type 2 diabetes. Surgery can be considered an appropriate treatment for people with Type 2 diabetes and obesity not achieving recommended treatment targets with medical therapies, especially in the presence of other major co-morbidities. The procedures must be performed within accepted guidelines and require appropriate multidisciplinary assessment for the procedure, comprehensive patient education and ongoing care, as well as safe and standardized surgical procedures. National guidelines for bariatric surgery need to be developed for people with Type 2 diabetes and a BMI of 35 kg/m(2) or more.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21480973 PMCID: PMC3123702 DOI: 10.1111/j.1464-5491.2011.03306.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabet Med ISSN: 0742-3071 Impact factor: 4.359
The classification of weight category by BMI
| BMI (kg/m2) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Classification | Principal cut-off points | Cut-off points for Asians |
| Normal range | 18.5–24.9 | 18.5–22.9 |
| 23.0–24.9 | ||
| Pre-obese | 25.0–29.9 | 25.0–27.4 |
| 27.5–29.9 | ||
| Obese class I | 30.0–34.9 | 30.0–32.4 |
| 32.5–34.9 | ||
| Obese class II | 35.0–39.9 | 35.0–37.4 |
| 37.5–39.9 | ||
| Obese class III | ≥ 40.0 | ≥ 40.0 |
For Asian populations, classifications remain the same as the international classification, but that public health action points for interventions are set at 23, 27.5, 32.5 and 37.5 kg/m2 [74].
We address eligibility and prioritization for bariatric surgery within the coloured zones above.
Source: Adapted from the World Health Organization (WHO) 2004 [75].
Two- and 10-year diabetes incidence and remission* rates from the Swedish Obese Subjects Study [7]
| Surgical | Control | |
|---|---|---|
| 2-year incident | 1% | 8% |
| 10-year incident | 8% | 24% |
| 2-year remission | 72% | 21% |
| 10-yearremission | 36% | 13% |
Remission based on fasting plasma glucose < 7.0 mmol/l and not on hypoglycaemic therapy [7].
Mortality hazard ratios for white non-smokers [44]
| 22.5–25 kg/m2 | 30–35 kg/m2 | 35–40 kg/m2 | 40–45 kg/m2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| White women | 1.0 | 1.44 | 1.88 | 2.51 |
| White men | 1.0 | 1.44 | 2.06 | 2.93 |
Cost-effectiveness of bariatric procedures in people with diabetes
| Study | Type 2 diabetes status | Total costs | QALYs | Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER), Cost per QALY | Cost-effectiveness threshold/interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Keating | $A50 000 | ||||
| Standard care | Recently diagnosed | 101 376 | 14.5 | — | — |
| Banding surgery | Recently diagnosed | 98 931 | 15.7 | (ICER N/A) Save $2444 Generate 1.2 QALYs | Dominant |
| Hoerger | $US50 000 | ||||
| Standard care | Recently diagnosed | 71 130 | 9.55 | — | — |
| Bypass surgery | Recently diagnosed | 86 655 | 11.76 | 7000 | Very CE |
| Banding surgery | Recently diagnosed | 89 029 | 11.12 | 11 000 | Very CE |
| Standard care | Established | 79 618 | 7.68 | ||
| Bypass surgery | Established | 99 944 | 9.38 | 12 000 | Very CE |
| Banding surgery | Established | 96 921 | 9.02 | 13 000 | Very CE |
| Picot | £20–30 000 | ||||
| Standard care | Recently diagnosed | 31 683 | 10.39 | — | — |
| Banding surgery | Established | 33 182 | 11.49 | 1367 | Very CE |
Base case.
CE, cost-effective; QALY, quality-adjusted life-years.
In mid 2006: 1 Euro = $A1.72/£0.69/$US1.28.
National and international guidelines* for eligibility for bariatric surgery (adults)
| NIH [ | NHMRC [ | NICE [ | European [ | ADA [ | SIGN [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year | 1991 | 2003 | 2006 | 2007 | 2010 | 2010 |
| Recommended:BMI | > 50 kg/m2 | |||||
| Eligible (A): BMI | > 40 kg/m2 | > 40 kg/m2 | > 40 kg/m2 | > 40 kg/m2 | > 40 kg/m2 | |
| Eligible (B): BMI | 35–40 kg/m2 with one serious weight-loss-responsive co-morbidity | 35–40 kg/m2 with one serious weight-loss-responsive co-morbidity | 35–40 kg/m2 with disease that could improve with weight loss | 35–40 kg/m2 with one weight-loss-responsive co-morbidity | 35–40 kg/m2 if control of diabetes and co-morbidity is difficult | > 35 kg/m2 with one serious weight-loss-responsive co-morbidity |
| Comment | Medicare NCD 2004 removed ‘serious’ BMI 30–35 kg/m2 | Recognized use < BMI 35 kg/m2 | Weight loss pre-surgery does not change eligibility | BMI < 35 kg/m2 insufficient evidence to date | ||
| Review | Outdated Of historic interest | Review in 3 years suggested |
The guidelines above are qualified by the following common elements: appropriate non-surgical weight-loss measures have been tried and failed; there is the provision for, and a commitment to, long-term follow-up; and individual risk–benefit ratio needs to be evaluated.
ADA, American Diabetes Association; NCD, non-communicable disease; A, eligible BMI; B, eligible conditional BMI; NHMRC, National Health and Medical Research Council; NICE, National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence; NIH, National Institutes of Health; SIGN, Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network.
Estimated weight loss and percentage of those with diabetes who remit at 2 years after conventional bariatric procedures*
| % excess BMI loss | % remission of diabetes | |
|---|---|---|
| Bilio-pancreatic diversion | 73 | 95 |
| Roux-en-Y gastric bypass | 63 | 80 |
| Laparoscopic adjustable gastric band | 49 | 57 |
Systematic review (Buchwald et al. [6]).
Mean % on BMI in excess of 25% that is lost.
Patient and programme factors associated with risk of surgery
| Programme—surgical factors ‘higher risk’ | Patients' factors ‘higher risk’ [ |
|---|---|
| Surgeon inexperience or in learning curve for the particular procedure | Older age |
| Low volume centre or surgeon performing surgery occasionally | Increasing BMI |
| Morbidity and mortality increase with the complexity of the procedure | Male gender |
| Open compared with laparoscopic procedures | Hypertension |
| Revisional surgery | Obstructive sleep apnoea |
| High risk of pulmonary thromboembolism | |
| Limited physical mobility |
A summary of more common nutritional concerns for each procedure
| LAGB | SG | RYGB | BPD | BPD-DS | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iron | + | ++ | +++ | +++ | ++ |
| Thiamine | + | ++ | + | + | + |
| Vitamin B12 | + | ++ | +++ | ++ | ++ |
| Folate | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ |
| Calcium | + | ++ | ++ | +++ | +++ |
| Vitamin D | + | + | ++ | +++ | +++ |
| Protein | + | + | + | ++ | ++ |
| Fat-soluble vitamins and essential fatty acids | + | + | + | +++ | +++ |
+, recommended daily intake (allowance) or standard multivitamin preparation likely to be sufficient.
++, significant risk of deficiency or increased requirements. Specific supplementation is appropriate especially in higher-risk groups.
+++, high risk of deficiency. Additional specific supplementation is necessary to prevent deficiency. Careful monitoring is recommended. Supplementation well in excess of daily requirements may be necessary.
BPD, bilio-pancreatic diversion; BPD-DS, bilio-pancreatic diversion with duodenal switch; LAGB, laparoscopic adjustable gastric band; RYGB, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass; SG, sleeve gastrectomy.
Eligibility and prioritization for bariatric surgery based on failed non-surgical weight-loss therapy*, BMI, ethnicity† and disease control
| BMI range | Eligible for surgery | Prioritized for surgery |
|---|---|---|
| < 30 kg/m2 | No | No |
| 30–35 kg/m2 | Yes—conditional | No |
| 35–40 kg/m2 | Yes | Yes—conditional |
| > 40 kg/m2 | Yes | Yes |
In all cases, patients should have failed to lose weight and sustain significant weight loss through non-surgical weight-management programmes, and have Type 2 diabetes that has not responded adequately to lifestyle measures (± metformin) with a HbA1c < 53 mmol/mol (7%).
Action points should be lowered by 2.5 BMI point levels for Asian people [74].
HbA1c > 58 mmol/mol (7.5%) despite fully optimized conventional therapy, especially if weight is increasing, or other weight responsive co-morbidities not achieving targets on conventional therapies. For example, blood pressure, dyslipidaemia and obstructive sleep apnoea.
| • 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, healthcare 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, healthcare providers require as potent an armamentarium of therapeutic interventions as possible. |
| • In addition to behavioural 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 kg/m2 or more. |
| • Surgery should be considered as an alternative treatment option in patients with a BMI between 30 and 35 kg/m2 when diabetes cannot be adequately controlled by optimal medical regimen, especially in the presence of other major cardiovascular disease risk factors. |
| • In Asian, and some other ethnicities of increased risk, BMI action points may be reduced by 2.5 kg/m2. |
| • Clinically severe obesity is a complex and chronic medical condition. Societal prejudices about severe obesity, which also exist within the healthcare 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 kg/m2 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 gallstone 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. |
| • In order to optimize the future use of bariatric surgery as a therapeutic modality for Type 2 diabetes, further research is required. |
| • Expertise and experience in the bariatric surgical procedures |
| • The patient's preference when the range of risks and benefits, the importance of compliance, and the effects on eating choices and behaviours have been fully described |
| • The patient's general health and risk factors associated with high perioperative morbidity and mortality |
| • The simplicity and reversibility of a procedure |
| • The duration of Type 2 diabetes and the degree of apparent residual B-cell function |
| • The follow-up regimen for the procedure and the commitment of the patient to adhere to it |
| • Bariatric surgery is a component of the ongoing process of chronic disease management of Type 2 diabetes and obesity |
| • Bariatric surgery should be performed in high-volume centres with multidisciplinary teams that are experienced in the management of obesity and diabetes. Members of the team should have understanding across disciplines and work together with common expectations and goals. The team needs to integrate with primary care, diabetes management, nutritional and lifestyle support, and surgeon's teams with consistent messages and agreed policies |
| • The surgical team must have undertaken relevant supervized training and have specialist experience in types of bariatric surgery performed within the programme |
| • Pre-surgical assessment needs to be comprehensive, including assessment of metabolic, physical, psychological and nutritional health. Patients should have realistic expectations of the risks and benefits of surgery along with their lifelong role in lifestyle intervention, nutritional support and follow-up |
| • Management of diabetes and other co-morbidities should be optimized and short-term pre-operative weight loss considered to improve health and visibility at the time of surgery |
| • The multidisciplinary team need to understand and recognize early and long-term complications in a timely manner and know when to refer back to the surgeon or others for specific care |
| • Lifelong follow-up on at least an annual basis is needed for ongoing lifestyle support, and post-surgical and diabetes monitoring |
| • Teams should collect prospective data and measure diabetes outcomes in methods consistent with IDF recommendations |
| • Regular, post-operative nutritional monitoring is required, with attention to appropriate diet, monitoring of micronutrient status and individualized nutritional supplementation, support and guidance to achieve long-term weight loss and weight maintenance |
| • Follow-up should include a psychological evaluation, support and therapy if appropriate. Mental illness, especially depression, is common in diabetes and severe obesity |
| • In order to help sustain weight loss from bariatric surgery, patients must be committed to increased levels of ongoing daily physical activity |
| • All practices are encouraged to engage and promote national programmes of ‘centres of excellence’ or equivalent and collect prospective data through registries |
| Optimization of the metabolic state may be defined as: |
| • HbA1c≤ 42 mmol/mol (6%) |
| • no hypoglycaemia |
| • total cholesterol < 4 mmol/l; LDL cholesterol < 2 mmol/l |
| • triglycerides < 2.2 mmol/l |
| • blood pressure < 135/85 mmHg |
| • > 15% weight loss |
| • with reduced medication from the pre-operated state or without other medications (where medications are continued, reduced doses from pre-surgery with minimal side effects would be expected) |
| A substantial improvement in the metabolic state may be defined as: |
| • lowering of HbA1c by > 20% |
| • LDL < 2.3 mmol/l |
| • blood pressure < 135/85 mmHg |
| with reduced medication from the pre-operated state |
| 1. Bariatric surgery is an appropriate treatment for people with Type 2 diabetes and obesity (BMI equal to or greater than 35 kg/m2) not achieving recommended treatment targets with medical therapies, especially where there are other obesity-related co-morbidities. Under some circumstances people with a BMI of 30–35 kg/m2 should be eligible for surgery |
| 2. It is up to each health system to determine whether bariatric surgery with its support services is economically appropriate |
| 3. Surgery should be considered as complementary to medical therapies to reduce microvascular and cardiovascular risk |
| 4. Patients should be assessed and managed by experienced multidisciplinary teams |
| 5. Glycaemic control should be optimized peri-operatively and should be closely monitored after surgery |
| 6. Ongoing and long-term nutritional supplementation and support must be provided to patients after surgery |
| 7. Apart from conventional procedures now in use, new techniques and devices should be explored in research settings only. Conventional procedures should be standardized. Other techniques, variations and novel devices can be introduced when supported by an evidence base |
| 8. Procedure selection requires appropriate assessment of risk vs. benefit of each operation as part of the process for selecting the surgical treatment options for an individual patient |
| 9. New bariatric procedures require robust assessment for their efficacy, safety and durability, using similar principles to those for assessing new drug therapies and having regards to the benefits and risks of established therapy |
| 10. Regional surgical expertise, multidisciplinary team experience and documented quality outcomes are important factors in the regional choice of bariatric procedures |
| 11. There should be a minimal accepted data set for pre-surgery and follow-up to allow audit of clinical programmes, for example: |
| • HbA1c |
| • fasting glucose and insulin |
| • BMI |
| • waist circumference |
| • retinopathy status (recent eye examination) |
| • nephropathy (e.g. test for microalbuminuria within previous year) |
| • liver functions tests |
| • lipid profile |
| • blood pressure measurement |
| • foot exam (recent) |
| • documentation of medications—(glycaemia, lipids and hypertension) |
| • these should be used preoperatively |
| • fasting C-peptide where available |
| • auto-antibody status, e.g. anti-GAD where available |
| 12. All longitudinal studies should include quality of life as one of the outcomes |
| 13. It should be recognized that a prolonged period of normalization of glycaemic control has benefit even if there is eventual relapse |
| 1. Studies are needed to establish more robust criteria than BMI for predicting benefit from surgery and define which patients benefit most from which procedures |
| 2. Studies are needed to establish the benefit of surgery for persons with diabetes and BMI < 35 kg/m2 |
| 3. Studies are needed to establish whether bariatric procedures prevent or slow the progressive loss of B-cell function characteristic of Type 2 diabetes |
| 4. Studies are required to document the course of complications after surgery to obtain evidence that surgery stabilizes and ideally improves microvascular complications |
| 5. Studies are needed to establish the duration of the benefit of surgery |
| 6. Studies are needed to establish the mechanisms of the success of surgery and the mechanisms associated with recurrence |
| 7. Studies are needed to establish the long-term complications of surgery |
| 8. New techniques should be assessed rigorously for efficacy and safety and, ideally, mechanisms, and demonstrate their equivalence or superiority to classical surgical techniques, moving to human studies after appropriate preclinical studies |
| 9. Studies are needed to define the best regimens of diabetes management post-bariatric surgery |
| 10. It will be important to phenotype candidates for surgery to define what will be the most appropriate bariatric procedure for persons with diabetes in different age groups, different duration of diabetes, etc. |
| 11. Randomized controlled trials are needed to evaluate and compare different bariatric procedures for the treatment of diabetes between themselves, as well as emerging non-surgical therapies |
| The IDF consensus meeting was held at the IDF head office in Brussels, Belgium (5-6 December 2010). This meeting was convened by: |
| Professor George Alberti |
| Imperial College, London and Newcastle University, UK |
| Professor John B. Dixon |
| Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
| Professor Francesco Rubino |
| Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA |
| Professor Paul Zimmet |
| Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
| Other attendees at the meeting were: |
| Professor Stephanie Amiel |
| King's College, London, UK |
| Professor Louise A. Baur |
| University of Sydney, Australia |
| Professor Nam H. Cho |
| Ajou University School of Medicine, Korea |
| Dr Bruno Geloneze |
| Univerity of Campinas (UNICAMP), Brazil |
| Professor Jan Willem Greve |
| Atrium Medical Center, Parkstad Heerlen, the Netherlands |
| Professor Linong Ji |
| Peking Unviersity People's Hospital, China |
| Dr Muffazal Lakdawala |
| Saifee Hospital, Mumbai, India |
| Professor Wei-Jei Lee |
| Ming-Sheng General Hospital, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan |
| Professor Pierre Lefebvre |
| International Diabetes Federation and University of Liege, Belgium |
| Dr Carel le Roux |
| Imperial College London, UK |
| Professor Jean-Claude Mbanya |
| International Diabetes Federation, Younde, Cameroon |
| Professor Gertrude Mingrone |
| Catholic University of Rome, Italy |
| Professor Philip R. Schauer |
| Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine, USA |
| Professor Luc Van Gaal |
| Antwerp University Hospital, Belgium |
| Dr David Whiting |
| International Diabetes Federation, Brussels, Belgium |
| Professor Bruce M. Wolfe |
| Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU), USA |
| All panel members made a substantial contribution to the meeting and subsequent formulation of the position statement |