| Literature DB >> 28695722 |
R L Kolotkin1,2,3,4,5, J R Andersen3,4.
Abstract
This is the first systematic review of reviews to assess the effect of obesity and weight loss on health-related quality of life (HRQoL). We identified 12 meta-analyses/systematic reviews published between January 2001 and July 2016. They addressed the following themes: (i) the relationship between weight/body mass index and HRQoL (baseline/pre-intervention; n = 2). (ii) HRQoL after weight loss (varied interventions and/or study design; n = 2). (iii) HRQoL after weight loss (randomized controlled trials only; n = 2). (iv) HRQoL after bariatric surgery (n = 6). We found that in all populations, obesity was associated with significantly lower generic and obesity-specific HRQoL. The relationship between weight loss and improved HRQoL was consistently demonstrated after bariatric surgery, perhaps due to a greater than average weight loss compared with other treatments. Improved HRQoL was evident after non-surgical weight loss, but was not consistently demonstrated, even in randomized controlled trials. This inconsistency may be attributed to variation in quality of reporting, assessment measures, study populations and weight-loss interventions. We recommend longer-term studies, using both generic and obesity-specific measures, which go beyond HRQoL in isolation to exploring mediators of HRQoL changes and interactions with other variables, such as comorbidities, fitness level and body image.Entities:
Keywords: Obesity; quality of life; weight loss; weight management
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28695722 PMCID: PMC5600094 DOI: 10.1111/cob.12203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Obes ISSN: 1758-8103
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis (PRISMA) flow chart. NA, not applicable. [Colour figure can be viewed at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
Figure 2Identification and selection of published review articles on obesity and/or weight management and quality of life from January 2001 to July 2016. QoL, quality of life. [Colour figure can be viewed at wileyonlinelibrary.com]
Review articles focusing on obesity or weight management and HRQoL
| No. | Author, date | Type/goal of review | Studies | Key findings | Strengths | Limitations |
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| 1 | van Nunen |
Meta‐analysis to examine differences in baseline HRQoL among seekers of surgical treatment for obesity, seekers of non‐surgical treatment, non‐treatment‐seeking persons with obesity, general population with obesity and general population |
54 cross‐sectional studies Dutch, English, French and German 1996–2006 |
Based on both generic and obesity‐specific measures, populations with obesity experienced reduced HRQoL For both SF‐36 and IWQOL‐Lite, the most reduced HRQoL occurred in the surgical patients Comparing patients to non‐patients, SF‐36 results varied widely by subscale, with only physical functioning showing consistently reduced HRQoL for surgical patient groups However, reduced HRQoL was found on all IWQOL‐Lite subscales for patient groups compared with non‐patients After adjustment for BMI, surgical patients still demonstrated reduced HRQoL on most SF‐36 subscales, whereas for IWQOL‐Lite differences between populations disappeared after adjustment for BMI likely due to the IWQOL‐Lite being a weight‐related measure of HRQoL |
Analysis of HRQoL in 100 000 geographically diverse individuals in different populations Articles included both generic (SF‐36) and obesity‐specific (IWQOL‐Lite) HRQoL measures |
The general population with obesity is heterogeneous, including those who intend to seek medical intervention, those who plan their own interventions, and those who do not intend to seek treatment There is underrepresentation of the intentionally non–treatment‐seeking population Included in only 2/54 studies |
| 2 | Ul‐Haq |
Meta‐analysis to determine the relationships between BMI and physical and mental HRQoL |
8 cross‐sectional studies English only 2000–2011 |
Physical HRQoL Individuals with higher BMI had significantly reduced physical HRQoL Clear evidence of a dose relationship across all BMI categories Mental HRQoL Only reduced among individuals classified as Class III obesity (BMI ≥ 40 kg m−2) |
Population studies from Australia, Canada, England, Germany, Sweden, USA Studies included 43 086 participants Sophisticated methodology Analysed pooled estimates of weighted mean difference in PCS and MCS by BMI in reference to normal weight Determined degree of heterogeneity and assessed publication bias Applied a statistical method to reduce risk of type I errors |
Limited to articles that assessed HRQoL with a single, generic measure only (SF‐36) 1 of 8 studies was based on male Veteran's Administration patients only |
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| 3 | Carson |
Systematic review to examine the effects of dietary intervention on HRQoL |
24 studies of ≥12 weeks' duration, including RCTs (21) and non‐RCT prospective studies (3) English, US only 1990–2012 |
In most studies (88%), study participants reported improved HRQoL after dietary intervention 11/24 studies indicated changes in HRQoL were likely a result of weight loss 4/24 studies demonstrated that changes in HRQoL were independent of weight loss In 9/24 studies, it was unclear if changes in HRQoL were a result of weight loss |
Articles included used both generic (QWB, SF‐36, SF‐12) and obesity‐specific (IWQOL, IWQOL‐Lite) HRQoL measures |
4/24 studies used only non‐obesity‐specific disease measures (e.g. measure of heart failure) 3 of the studies using non‐obesity‐specific measures reported an improvement in HRQoL over time 13/24 studies involved short‐term follow‐ups (12–26 weeks) |
| 4 | Kroes |
Systematic review to review evidence for the impact of weight/BMI change on HRQoL |
20 studies, including RCTs (8), prospective comparative cohorts (5), prospective single‐arm cohorts (5), cross‐sectional (1) and retrospective analyses of RCTs (1) English, US only ≥1‐year follow‐up |
Of the studies that explicitly reported on the association between HRQoL and weight change: For lifestyle approach ( For pharmaceutical intervention ( For bariatric surgery at ≥1‐year follow‐up: greater weight loss showed significant correlations with vitality ( SF‐36 (generic): improvements in physical aspects reported more frequently than mental/psychosocial aspects IWQOL‐Lite (obesity‐specific): improvements in all or most subscales |
Unique approach: to investigate the impact of weight change on HRQoL, rather than to compare improvements in HRQoL between interventions Studies had ≥1‐year follow‐up |
Included only US, English articles Studies included were heterogeneous in terms of intervention (bariatric surgery [ Although this review included studies using any HRQoL measurement, reporting was limited to SF‐36 and IWQOL‐Lite |
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| 5 | Maciejewski |
Meta‐analysis to estimate the effect of various weight‐loss interventions (e.g. medication, diet, exercise, commercial programme, cognitive behaviour therapy, bariatric surgery) on HRQoL in RCT studies, and a meta‐analysis of the effect of weight‐loss treatment on depressive symptoms |
34 RCTs |
HRQoL outcomes were not consistently improved in RCTs of weight loss Generic measures: 9/34 studies showed HRQoL improvements in ≥1 domains Obesity‐specific measures: 6/11 studies showed positive treatment effects |
Articles included used both generic (GHRI, GWB, SF‐36, SIP, VAS) and obesity‐specific (IWQOL, OP) HRQoL measures Study duration varied from 6 to 208 weeks; 8 studies of >52 weeks’ duration and 26 studies of ≤1 year's duration Study quality was assessed according to 6 different criteria: concealment of randomization, blinding, loss to follow‐up, intention‐to‐treat analysis, adjustment for mediating effects of weight loss, and adjustment for multiple comparisons |
Review stated that quality of studies examined was poor |
| 6 | Warkentin |
Systematic review and meta‐analysis to examine the effect of weight loss (any weight‐loss intervention vs. no intervention, placebo or active comparator) on HRQoL in RCTs |
53 RCTs met eligibility 11/53 included in meta‐analysis |
Generic measures: 14/36 studies found significant improvements Obesity‐specific measures: 4/15 studies found significant improvements Contingency table approach (included all trials): no significant association between weight‐loss and overall HRQoL Quantitative data pooling approach (included 25% of trials): statistically significant improvements in physical but not mental health |
Articles included used both generic (EQ‐5D, GHQ, QWB, SF‐36, VAS) and obesity‐specific (IWQOL‐Lite, M‐A QoLQII, OAS, OP, ORWELL, WRSM) HRQoL measures Different analytical methods were used Contingency table approach: incorporates information from all studies examined, but gives them equal weight, such that the magnitude of changes cannot be compared Conventional random effects meta‐analytical technique: considered to be more rigorous because uses study‐specific values and inverse‐variance weighting to generate pooled estimates; however, quantitative data pooling was limited to only 25% of available studies due to the poor quality of reporting |
Data from most studies could not be quantitatively pooled for meta‐analysis In 35/53 RCTs, study duration was <1 year |
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| 7 | Magallares and Schomerus, 2015 |
Meta‐analysis to compare HRQoL before and 1 year after bariatric surgery |
21 studies English, German, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish |
Compared to pre‐surgery, patients scored higher in physical and mental components of the SF‐36 1 year after bariatric surgery The size of the effect was much greater for the physical component than the mental component, but both effects were very high There was a large variability/heterogeneity in amount of improvement in both PCS and MCS |
Studies drawn from a diverse literature base that encompassed five languages |
Study design of included studies was not indicated Limited to those with a follow‐up period of ≤1 year and those that administered only SF‐36 |
| 8 | Lindekilde |
Systematic review and meta‐analysis to assess the impact of bariatric surgery (15 different methods) on HRQoL and the between‐study variation |
72 studies, including cohort studies (60), non‐randomized studies (5), randomized studies (7) |
Bariatric surgery had a significant positive influence on HRQoL Influence was greater on physical vs. mental HRQoL Greater effects were found for obesity‐specific measures of HRQoL than for other types A large variability (heterogeneity) in HRQoL outcomes was found |
Articles included used 22 HRQoL measures, including generic (EQ‐5D, SF‐36), obesity‐specific (IWQOL, IWQOL‐Lite, M‐A QoLQII, WRSM), combined generic/obesity‐specific (HRQoL‐HSP) and gastrointestinal‐specific (GIQLI) HRQoL measures Follow‐up ranged from 3 to 120 months Controlled for multiple other factors (baseline BMI, age, type of measure, type of surgery, months to follow‐up, year of publication and country of study) Provided effect sizes of changes in HRQoL |
HRQoL scales and subscales were categorized into 5 domains (physical, mental, social, functional and total), but authors do not indicate how they assigned scores to the domains Majority of included studies used a non‐randomized design; none of the randomized studies used a non‐surgical control group |
| 9 | Andersen |
Systematic review to study the long‐term (i.e. ≥5 years) effects of bariatric surgery (6 different methods) on HRQoL |
7 prospective studies, 2 with control groups English ≥5 year follow‐up |
6/7 studies showed improvements in 9 aspects of HRQoL Peak improvements in HRQoL observed during first 1–2 postoperative years (characterized by the most meaningful amount of weight loss), followed by a gradual decline that stabilized at 5 years 5‐year postoperative scores were an improvement from preoperative scores, but lower than the population norm Of the statistically significant improvements in HRQoL, 92% were clinically meaningful (i.e. >0.5 standard deviation change from baseline) |
Review focuses exclusively on high‐quality, long‐term (5–10 years), prospective studies of bariatric surgery All studies included were high quality, defined as attrition rate <50%, and 90% power to detect >0.5 standard deviation change from baseline using a two‐sided paired test Articles included used both generic (15D, GHRI scale, GWB, NHPII, SF‐36) and obesity‐specific (IWQOL‐Lite, OP, Weight Distress) HRQoL measures |
Attrition rates in included studies ranged from 8 to 39.2% Included studies were heterogeneous with respect to baseline BMI, HRQoL instruments and surgical methods |
| 10 | Jumbe, 2015 |
Systematic review to assess psychosocial HRQoL of bariatric surgery patients at a minimum of 1‐year follow‐up compared to: Individuals receiving non‐surgical interventions Non‐treated comparison groups |
11 studies, including RCTs (2), prospective cohorts (8) and retrospective analysis (1) (SF‐36 measured at follow‐up only) |
Bariatric surgery vs. non‐surgical treatment For all 3 studies using the SF‐36 scale, bariatric surgery groups had better HRQoL outcomes vs. non‐surgical interventions 1/3 studies using the SF‐36 scale reported significantly better outcomes across all subscales Bariatric surgery vs. control groups For 5 of the 7 studies assessing generic and/or obesity‐specific HRQoL pre‐and posttreatment, patients in surgical groups reported higher HRQoL vs. control groups at follow‐up Improvements were seen in all or some of the mental/psychosocial aspects of HRQoL |
Articles included both generic (SF‐36, SF‐12, EQ‐5D, SIP), and obesity‐specific measures (IWQOL‐Lite, OP) Follow‐up ranged from 1 to 10 years Study quality was evaluated |
2 studies assessed HRQoL in individuals with both obesity and diabetes 4 studies Conclusion of “persistent psychological issues post‐surgery” is an overstatement of the data presented in the reviewed studies Despite better outcomes reported in 3 of the 4 studies comparing bariatric surgery with non‐surgical treatment, authors state that, overall, these studies show moderate evidence of similar improvements in HRQoL in these 2 groups Despite reporting of improvements in mental/psychosocial HRQoL in several of the studies, authors state that long‐term psychosocial HRQoL does not improve after bariatric surgery compared to controls |
| 11 | Hachem |
Systematic review to examine HRQoL as an outcome of bariatric surgery by comparing: Bariatric surgery to alternative weight‐loss interventions Different types of bariatric surgery |
13 studies 7 studies (1 RCT, 6 quasi‐experimental studies): bariatric surgery vs. an alternative weight‐loss intervention 6 studies (5 RCTs, 1 quasi‐experimental study): 1 type of bariatric surgery vs. another English |
Significant HRQoL improvements following bariatric surgery Greater improvements in surgical vs. non‐surgical interventions Significant HRQoL improvements in gastric bypass and laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy vs. vertical banding gastroplasty and laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding, respectively No differences in HRQoL between variations of the same type of surgery (e.g. gastric bypass vs. mini gastric bypass) |
Articles included used generic (SF‐36, M–A QoLQII, SIP, GHRI), obesity‐specific (IWQOL‐Lite, OWLQOL, WRSM, GIQLI, QOLOD) and gastrointestinal‐specific HRQoL measures Follow‐up ranged from 2 months to 10 years |
2 studies measured HRQoL post‐surgery only 6 studies reported follow‐ups of ≤1 year Results were not included for the 10‐year follow‐up of Karlsson et al. Only 2 studies evaluated between‐group differences Each comparison of different surgery types was made in only a single study Reporting of HRQoL results was inconsistent, with some reporting overall scores, some reporting composite scores, and some reporting selected subscale scores 2 included studies |
| 12 | Driscoll |
Systematic review and meta‐analysis of studies reporting HRQoL data ≥5 years after bariatric surgery and in non‐surgical control groups with obesity |
9 studies, including cross‐sectional studies (7), prospective cohort study (1), and non‐randomized controlled trial (1) |
Systematic review of all studies and measures Greater improvements were noted in both the physical and mental domains of HRQoL for the surgical groups compared with the control groups; however, there were inconsistencies in results (i.e. favouring surgical group, favouring control group, and no difference) in both physical and mental domains Meta‐analysis of SF‐36 results Inconsistencies that had been seen in the systematic review were not seen in the meta‐analysis Significant improvement in all mental domains after 5 years favouring the surgical group compared with the controls; and 3/4 physical domains The magnitude of improvement in surgical groups vs. control groups was greater for the physical than mental domains |
Articles included used both generic (SF‐36, EQ‐5D, Current Health Scale from the GHRI and obesity‐specific (IWQOL‐Lite, OP) measures Studies had follow‐up periods of 5 to 25 years |
Meta‐analysis could only be conducted on studies reporting SF‐36 scores |
HRQoL‐HSP is sometimes referred to as ‘Lewin‐TAG’.
15D, 15‐dimensional measure; EQ‐5D, EuroQuol‐5D measure; GHQ, General Health Questionnaire; GHRI, General Health Rating Index; GIQLI, Gastrointestinal Quality of Life measure; GWB, General Well‐Being measure; HRQoL, health‐related quality of life; HRQoL‐HSP, Health‐related quality of life‐Health State Preference Assessment; IWQOL, Impact of Weight on Quality of Life; IWQOL‐Lite, Impact of Weight on Quality of Life‐Lite; M–A QoLQII, Moorehead–Ardelt Quality of Life Questionnaire II; NHP, Nottingham Health Profile; OAS, Obesity Adjustment Survey; OP, Obesity‐related Problems scale; ORWELL, Obesity‐Related Well‐Being questionnaire; OWLQOL, Obesity and Weight Loss Quality of Life; QOLOD, Quality of Life, Obesity and Dietetics Rating Scale; QWB, Quality of Well‐Being scale; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SF‐36, Medical Outcomes Study Short‐Form‐36; SIP, Sickness Impact Profile; VAS, Visual Analogue Scale; WRSM, Weight‐Related Symptoms Measure.
Figure 3Summary of recommendations for future studies. BMI, body mass index; HRQoL, health‐related quality of life; PCS, Physical Component Summary. [Colour figure can be viewed at wileyonlinelibrary.com]