| Literature DB >> 31480306 |
Dimitrios Tsilingiris1, Chrysi Koliaki1, Alexander Kokkinos2.
Abstract
Although type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) has been traditionally viewed as an intractable chronic medical condition, accumulating evidence points towards the notion that a complete remission of T2DM is feasible following a choice of medical and/or surgical interventions. This has been paralleled by increasing interest in the establishment of a universal definition for T2DM remission which, under given circumstances, could be considered equivalent to a "cure". The efficacy of bariatric surgery in particular for achieving glycemic control has highlighted surgery as a candidate curative intervention for T2DM. Herein, available evidence regarding available surgical modalities and the mechanisms that drive metabolic amelioration after bariatric surgery are reviewed. Furthermore, reports from observational and randomized studies with regard to T2DM remission are reviewed, along with concepts relevant to the variety of definitions used for T2DM remission and other potential sources of discrepancy in success rates among different studies.Entities:
Keywords: bariatric surgery; diabetes remission; metabolic surgery; type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31480306 PMCID: PMC6747427 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16173171
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Schematic presentation of the main bariatric surgical modalities.
Major studies reporting type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) remission rates after surgical or lifestyle interventions and the respective remission criteria.
| Study | Study Population Characteristics | Study Design | Intervention | T2DM Remission Endpoint |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pories et al. (1995) [ | morbidly obese, T2DM, prediabetes | Retrospective cohort | RYGB | “Normal” levels of FPG, HbA1c |
| Wittgrove et al. (2000) [ | Morbidly obese | Prospective cohort | RYGB | Medication withdrawal and “normal” HbA1c |
| Dixon et al. (2002) [ | BMI > 35 kg/m2, T2DM | Prospective cohort | AGB | “Normal” levels of FPG, HbA1c, fasting insulin, c-peptide |
| Sugerman et al. (2003) [ | Morbidly obese | Retrospective cohort | GBP | FPG ≤ 120 mg/dL off medication |
| Schauer et al. (2003) [ | morbidly obese, T2DM | Prospective cohort | RYGB | “Normal” levels of FPG, HbA1c, medication withdrawal |
| Scopinaro et al. (2005) [ | obese, T2DM | Retrospective cohort | BPD | FPG < 110 mg/dL, ≥ 125 mg/dL for relapse |
| Dixon et al. (2008) [ | BMI 30–40 kg/m2 | RCT | AGB | FPG < 126 mg/dL, HbA1c < 6.2% off medication |
| Studies after ADA consensus panel definition (2009) | ||||
| Iaconelli et al. (2011) [ | BMI > 35 kg/m2 | Open case-control | BPD | ADA definition # |
| Kehagias et al. (2011) [ | BMI < 50 kg/m2 | RCT | VSG, RYGB | Glucose values below diabetic range during 2h-OGTT, off medication |
| Schauer et al. (2012) (STAMPEDE) [ | BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 | RCT | VSG, RYGB | HbA1c < 6% |
| Mingrone et al. (2012) [ | BMI ≥ 5 kg/m2 | RCT | BPD, RYGB | FPG < 100 mg/dL and HbA1c < 6.5% off medication for ≥ 1 year |
| Carlsson et al. (2012) (SOS cohort) [ | BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 | Prospective cohort | RYGB, AGB or VBG | FPG < 110 mg/dL off medication |
| Adams et al. (2012) [ | BMI ≥ 35 kg/m2 | Prospective cohort | RYGB | “Normal” levels of FPG, HbA1c off medication |
| Gregg et al. (2012) (Look AHEAD) [ | BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2 | RCT | ILI | FPG < 126 mg/dL and HbA1c < 6.5% |
| Arteburn et al. (2013) [ | T2DM | Retrospective cohort | RYGB | ADA definition # |
| Liang et al. (2013) [ | BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2 | RCT | RYGB, exenatide | Normal FPG, HbA1c off medication |
| Arteburn et al. (2013) [ | BMI ≥ 35 kg/m2 | Retrospective cohort | RYGB, AGB, VSG, other | FPG < 126 mg/dL and/or HbA1c<6.5% off medication for ≥90 days |
| Wentworth et al. (2014) [ | BMI 25–30 kg/m2 | RCT | AGB | Glucose values below diabetic range during 2h-OGTT, 2 days off medication |
| Courcoulas et al. (2014) [ | BMI 30–40 kg/m2 | RCT | AGB, RYGB | ADA definition # |
| Halperin et al. (2014) [ | BMI 30–42 kg/m2 | RCT | RYGB | FPG < 126mg/dL and HbA1c < 6.5% |
| Risstad et al. (2015) [ | BMI 50–60 kg/m2 | RCT | RYGB, BPD | ADA definition # |
| Yska et al. (2015) [ | BMI ≥ 35 kg/m2 | Retrospective cohort | RYGB, VSG, AGB, other | HbA1c < 6% off medication |
| Cummings et al. (2016) (CROSSROADS) [ | BMI 30–45 kg/m2 | RCT | RYGB | HbA1c < 6% off medication |
| Purnell et al. (2016) (LABS-2) [ | BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 | Prospective cohort | RYGB, AGB | HbA1c < 6.5% or FPG ≤ 6.9 mmol/L |
| Salminen, et al. (2018) (SLEEVEPASS) [ | Morbidly obese | RCT | VSG, RYGB | ADA definition # |
| Lean et al. (2018) (DiRECT) [ | BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2 | RCT | ILI | HbA1c < 6.5%, at least 2 months off medication |
| Madesin et al. (2019) [ | BMI ≥ 35 kg/m2 | Population-based cohort | RYGB | HbA1c < 6.5% off medication or |
ADA: American Diabetes Association; AGB: adjustable gastric banding; BMI: body mass index; BPD: biliopancreatic diversion; FPG: fasting plasma glucose; GBP: gastric bypass; ILI: intensive lifestyle intervention; OGTT: oral glucose tolerance test; RCT: randomized clinical trial; RYGB: Roux-en-Y gastric bypass; SG: sleeve gastrectomy; SOS: Swedish Obese Subjects; T2DM: type 2 diabetes mellitus; VBG: vertical banded gastroplasty. # See Section 4 for definition.
Pre-operative, patient-level factors that predict diabetes remission following bariatric surgery, identified among different studies.
| Study | Factors Predicting Remission | Factors Exerting a Neutral Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Pories et al. (1995) [ |
Shorter T2DM duration Younger age | |
| Dixon et al. (2002) [ |
Shorter diabetes duration | |
| Schauer et al. (2003) [ |
Better pre-operative glycemic control Absence of insulin treatment Shorter diabetes duration | |
| Dixon et al. (2008) [ |
Better pre-operative glycemic control |
Sex, age, baseline BMI, baseline C-peptide level, time spent engaged in planned physical activity |
| Schauer et al. (2012) (STAMPEDE) [ |
Shorter T2DM duration |
Age, sex, insulin use pre-op, baseline BMI, HbA1c, C-peptide, CRP, BP, lipids |
| Mingrone et al. (2012) [ |
Baseline triglyceride concentration | |
| Carlsson et al. (2012) (SOS cohort) [ |
Shorter T2DM duration, use of oral antidiabetic agents vs. no use, lower baseline glucose |
Age, sex, baseline BMI, baseline insulin treatment |
| Gregg et al. (2012) (Look AHEAD) [ |
Shorter diabetes duration Better pre-operative glycemic control Absence of insulin treatment |
Age, sex, race, baseline BMI, antihypertensive treatment, history of cardiovascular disease (CVD) |
| Arteburn et al. (2013) [ |
Male sex Shorter T2DM duration Better pre-operative glycemic control No use of oral antidiabetic agents or insulin treatment on baseline |
Age |
| Arteburn et al. (2013) [ |
Younger age Shorter T2DM duration No use of oral antidiabetic agents or insulin treatment on baseline Better pre-operative glycemic control Higher baseline BMI |
Sex |
| Cummings et al. (2016) (CROSSROADS) [ |
Age, sex, baseline BMI, diabetes duration, insulin usage | |
| Purnell et al. (2016) (LABS-2) [ |
Shorter diabetes duration Better pre-operative glycemic control No insulin treatment (AGB > RYGB) Baseline weight (AGB) Preserved insulin secretory function (RYGB) |
Baseline BMI (RYGB) Preserved insulin secretory function (AGB) |
| Madesin et al. (2019) [ |
Younger age Shorter diabetes duration Better pre-operative glycemic control No use of oral antidiabetic agents or insulin treatment on baseline |
Sex Charlson comorbidity index History of depression or other psychiatric disorders |
BMI: body mass index; T2DM: diabetes mellitus type 2; AGB: adjustable gastric banding; RYGB: Roux-en-Y gastric bypass.
Reported effects of bariatric surgery on the occurrence of chronic diabetes complications and impact on quality of life.
| Study | Follow up | Diabetes Complications | Quality of Life * |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dixon et al. (2002) [ | 1 year | (Beck’s depression inventory, SF-36) | |
| Schauer et al. (2003) [ | 20 months (median) | 50% (self-reported) improvement in diabetic neuropathy symptoms | |
| Schauer et al. (2000) [ | 16.9 months | (Moorehead-Ardelt QOL Questionnaire) Quality of life 58% greatly improved, 37% improved, 5% no change | |
| Iaconelli et al. (2011) [ | 10 years | All cases with microalbuminuria at baseline regressed by year 10. 2 new cases. Prevalence increased in the control group; 39.2% vs. 9% new nephropathy cases | |
| Schauer et al. (2012) (STAMPEDE) [ | 5 years | No effect on ophthalmologic outcomes vs. conservative treatment | (SF-36) Significant improvements in both surgical groups in the physical functioning, general health, and energy–fatigue subscales. |
| Mingrone et al. (2012) [ | 5 years | 5 major diabetic complications in the medically treated group (including 1 fatal myocardial infarction) vs. one in the RYGB arms | (SF-36) Better scores in physical and emotional aspects of QOL in both surgical arms compared to the medically treated arm |
| Carlsson et al. (2012) (SOS cohort) [ | 18 years | Reduced rates of chronic diabetes complications in the surgical vs. control groups (HRs 0.44 and 0.65 for incident microvascular and macrovascular complications, respectively) | |
| Karlsson et al. (2007) (SOS cohort) [ | 10 years | (SOS quality of life survey) at 0.5, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8 and 10 years. | |
| Adams et al. (2012) [ | 6 years | (SF-36) | |
| Halperin et al. (2014) [ | 1 year | (SF-36, PAID, EQ-5D, IWQOL) | |
| Risstad et al. (2015) [ | 5 years | (SF-36) | |
| Cummings et al. (2016) (CROSSROADS) [ | 1 year | (EQ-5D) | |
| Salminen et al. (2018) (SLEEVEPASS) [ | 5 years | (Moorehead-Ardelt QOL questionnaire) | |
| Madesin et al. (2019) [ | 5 years | 47% lower risk of microvascular complications in RYBG vs. controls |
* Text in parentheses indicate the quality of life assessment instrument used. QOL: quality of life; BMI: body mass index; BPD: biliopancreatic diversion; RYGB: Roux-en-Y gastric bypass; SG: sleeve gastrectomy; SOS: Swedish Obese Subjects; SF-36: Short Form (36) Health Survey; PAID: Problem Areas In Diabetes scale; EQ-5D: EuroQol-5D instrument; IWQOL: Impact of Weight on Quality of Life questionnaire.