| Literature DB >> 32309411 |
Rene Aleman1, Emanuele Lo Menzo1, Samuel Szomstein1, Raul J Rosenthal1.
Abstract
The single-anastomosis gastric bypass has been proposed as a simpler and efficient weight loss reducing surgery. Postoperative outcomes are comparable to those of contemporary popular procedures. There are, however, controversies regarding the efficiency and risks of one-anastomosis gastric bypass (OAGB). The purpose of this review is to define the role of OAGB in metabolic surgery via its operative outcomes. A review of English language literature was performed using the PubMed database, basing the search on the following keywords: "one-anastomosis gastric bypass" AND "outcomes". A total of 238 articles were considered for review. Following thorough screening and selection criteria, 7 articles were considered sufficient for assessment. The nature of the available evidence of this technique poses a challenge to OAGB in its establishment as a standard of care procedure. The anatomical configuration following surgery, as well as the metabolic implications of its hypo-absorptive nature, raises controversial and ongoing concerns that are yet to be addressed. Hence, prospective studies with long-term follow-up (>5 years) can bypass these concerns and allow the progression of the clinical practice of OAGB. 2020 Annals of Translational Medicine. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: One-anastomosis gastric bypass (OAGB); bariatric surgery; mini gastric bypass; obesity; single anastomosis gastric bypass; weight loss
Year: 2020 PMID: 32309411 PMCID: PMC7154323 DOI: 10.21037/atm.2020.02.03
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Transl Med ISSN: 2305-5839
Figure 1Postoperative upper gastrointestinal tract fluoroscopic study showing the gastrojejunostomy after OAGB. OAGB, one-anastomosis gastric bypass.
Figure 2Diagram showing the final anatomy after OAGB. OAGB, one-anastomosis gastric bypass.
Prospective cohort studies on OAGB and weight loss
| Study details | Number of patients | EWL (%) | Follow-up (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rutledge and Walsh ( | 2,410 | 80.5 | NR |
| Musella | 838 | 70.1±8.4 | 94.8 at 12 months |
| Yang | 89 | 70±20 | 100 at 12 months |
| Noun | 126 | 68.4 | 45.2 at 23 months |
| Lee | 1,163 | 72.9 | 56 at 5 years |
EWL, excess weight loss; NR, not reported; OAGB, one-anastomosis gastric bypass.
Possible complications after OAGB
| XXXX | Complications |
|---|---|
| Complications resolved surgically | |
| Requiring conversion to open surgery | Intra-abdominal bleeding |
| EG junction perforation | |
| Incorrect gastric transection | |
| Resolved by open reoperations | Intra-abdominal bleeding |
| Leaks (from anastomotic gastric reservoir) | |
| Small bowel obstruction | |
| Partial necrosis of the excluded stomach | |
| Resolved by laparoscopic exploratory laparotomy | Intra-abdominal bleeding |
| Leaks (from anastomotic gastric reservoir) | |
| Small bowel obstruction | |
| Acute dilation of the excluded stomach | |
| Complications resolved conservatively | |
| Resolved by medical treatment and endoscopic intervention (with or without fibrin glue sealing) | Leaks (from anastomotic gastric reservoir) |
| Resolved by medical treatment only | Acute pancreatitis |
| Other complications and side effects | |
| Medical treatment, IV or PO supplementation, need for transfusion | Esophageal clinical reflux |
| Protein malnutrition | |
| Iron deficiency | |
| Nausea/vomiting | |
| Folate/B12 deficiencies | |
| Diarrhea |
OAGB, one-anastomosis gastric bypass.
Prospective cohort studies and T2DM changes
| Study details | Number of patients | T2DM resolution (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Bruzzi | 175 | 82 |
| Yang | 89 | HbA1c from 6.5±1.4 to 5.3±0.5* |
| Musella | 974 | 84.4 |
| Lee | 1,163 | 89 |
| Noun | 126 | 85** |
| Rutledge and Walsh ( | 2,410 | 83 |
*, P=0.001; **, T2DM unspecified. T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus; HbA1c, glycosylated hemoglobin.