| Literature DB >> 33495937 |
Tanuka Datta1, Andrew J Lee2, Rachel Cain2, Melissa McCarey3, David J Whellan3.
Abstract
Obesity is a growing worldwide epidemic with significant economic burden that carries with it impacts on every physiologic system including the cardiovascular system. Specifically, the risk of heart failure has been shown to increase dramatically in obese individuals. The purpose of this review is to provide background on the individual burdens of heart failure and obesity, followed by exploring proposed physiologic mechanisms that interconnect these conditions, and furthermore introduce treatment strategies for weight loss focusing on bariatric surgery. Review of the existing literature on patients with obesity and heart failure who have undergone bariatric surgery is presented, compared, and contrasted.Entities:
Keywords: Bariatric surgery; Cardiomyopathy; Cardiovascular disease; Decreased ventricular function; Heart failure; Metabolic syndrome; Weight loss
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33495937 PMCID: PMC9033699 DOI: 10.1007/s10741-021-10078-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart Fail Rev ISSN: 1382-4147 Impact factor: 4.654
Fig. 1Several different bariatric surgery procedures
A range of limitations of the 7 studies (small sample size)
| Title | Author | Year | Center | N | Patient population | Study design | Type of bariatric surgery performed | Follow-up time | Event rate | Baseline patient characteristics | Baseline EF | Post operative outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bariatric surgery improves cardiac function in morbidly obese patients with severe cardiomyopathy | McCloskey et al. | 2007 | Unspecified | 14 | 14 patients with pre-op BMI > 40 + LVEF ≤ 35% who underwent bariatric surgery from 1998 - 2005 | Retrospective study. Assessed short-term morbidity/mortality, length of stay, excess weight loss, pre- and post-op LVEF, NY Heart Association functional class | 10 lapro Roux-en-Y, 1 open Roux-en-Y, 2 SG, 1 LGB | 6 months | N/A | Patients with BMI > 40, EF ≤ 35%, who had undergone BS from 1998 to 2005 | Improved from mean 23% to 32% | Mean decrease in BMI at 6 months of 14. Mean LVEF at 6 months significantly improved from 23 to 32% ( |
| Safety and efficacy of bariatric surgery in morbidly obese patients with severe systolic heart failure | Ramani et al. | 2008 | University of Pittsburgh medical center | 22 | Queried the HF clinic database of U Pitt Med center for patients with advanced systolic HF and morbid obesity. (12). Identified 10 matched controls that did not undergo Bsx from 2001 to 2006 | Retrospective study. Looked at obese patients with advanced HF and MO who underwent Bsx compared to matched controls that underwent conservative treatment (diet and exercise counseling) | laparoscopic Roux-en Y bypass, LSG, laparoscopic gastric banding, open Roux-en y bypass | 1 year | 1 pt had transient pulmonary edema. 1 pt had acute renal failure. No post-op Mis or anastomotic leaks. | BMI: 53, NYHA class 2.9 Matched controls: BMI 47.2, NYHA class 2.4 | Bsx: LVEF 22% Control: LVEF 24% | Operative group, BMI decreased significantly (53 to 38, |
| Impact of bariatric surgery on quality of life, functional capacity, and symptoms in patients with heart failure | Miranda et al. | 2013 | Mayo Clinic | 19 | 849 patients referred for Roux-en-Y gastric bypass Residents of Olmsted County referred for BSx from 1990 to 2005 | Retrospective. Non operative (6) vs. operative (13) in patients with HF based on a clinical diagnosis, EF < 50%, or grade II–IV diastolic dysfunction based on echocardiogram | Roux-en-Y | 4.3 year for bariatric, 2.7 for non-operative | N/A | Bariatric group: 62, 146 kg, 55 BMI, EF 57% Non-bariatric group: 69, 132 kg, 42 BMI, EF 57.5% | Bariatric: 57% Non-bariatric: 57.5% | |
| Bariatric Surgery Provides a "Bridge to Transplant" for Morbidly Obese Patients with Advanced Heart Failure and May Obviate the Need for Transplantation | Lim et al. | 2016 | St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney, Australia | 7 | 7 patients with advanced systolic heart failure and LVEF < 25% who underwent bariatric surgery for durable weight loss in order to later undergo cardiac transplantation | Retrospective single-center cohort analysis. Collected demographic data, clinical characteristics, heart failure etiology, preoperative LVEF and New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional class, type of bariatric surgery performed, and intraoperative right heart catheterization data. Assessed efficacy of surgery with absolute weight loss and BMI reduction, LVEF, and NYHA class at a minimum of 6 months post surgery. | 4 laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG), 3 laparoscopic adjustable gastric band (LAGB) | Median 406 days | N/A | Patients with advanced systolic HF and LVEF < 25% who underwent BS at St. Vincent's Hospital, Sydney, between Jan 2009 and Sep 2014 | Improved to median of 30% | At median follow-up of 406 days, median BMI reduction was 12.9 kg/m2 ( |
| Bariatric surgery–induced cardiac and lipidomic changes in obesity-related heart failure with preserved ejection fraction | Mikhalkova et al. | 2018 | Washington University School of Medicine surgery center | 12 | 12 women with HFpEF and obesity (BMI > 35) | Prospective study. Used labs, HF questionnaires, magnetic resonance spectroscopy, echocardiography, and mass spectrometry to assess HF symptoms, diastolic function, myocardial fat deposition, and plasma ceramides/sphingolipids. A validation cohort ( | Roux-en-Y | 3 months, 6 months | N/A | Women 35–65 years old with BMI > 35, diagnosis of HFpEF. EXCLUDE current tobacco use, an inability to be ambulatory or to lie flat for procedures, pregnancy or lactation, cardiac conditions that interfered with assessment of diastolic function (e.g., constrictive pericarditis or atrial fibrillation/flutter), contraindication to magnetic resonance spectroscopy, other major systemic disease except for type 2 diabetes, ejection fraction < 50%, uncontrolled hypertension, significant pulmonary hypertension by history and/or echocardiography, and/or evidence of ischemia on screening stress echocardiogram | N/A | HF questionnaire scores, cardiac mass, and liver fat decreased; early relaxation at septal + lateral mitral value annuli increased; cardiac fat unchanged. Decreased plasma ceramide/sphingolipid, but plasma lipid + cardiac function changes did not correlate |
| Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy in heart failure patients with left ventricular assist device | Punchai et al. | 2019 | Cleveland Clinic | 7 | (7) Patients with ESHF NYHA class 2-4 who underwent LVAD implantation and subsequent Bsx from 2013 to 2017. | Retrospective study. Compared pre and post LSG in obese patients with ESHF with LVAD | LSG | Mean 24 months | 5 pts (71%) experienced 30-day complications, including GI bleeding, acute cholecystitis with septic shock. No 1 year mortality, arrhythmias, UTIs, nausea. | Median age: 39 years Median BMI: 43.6 | Pre-op 17% | The LVEF increased (19 to 22%), the NYHA class improved (3 to 2), 3 patients underwent successful heart transplantations, BMI decreased (43.6 to 37.2) |
| Impact of bariatric surgery on heart failure mortality | Aleassa et al. | 2019 | Healthcare cost and utilization project nationwide inpatient sample (2007–2014) | 2810 | 2810 patients with principal discharge diagnosis of HF who also had a history of prior bariatric surgery | Retrospective analysis. Patients were matched 1:5 with patients who had similar principal diagnoses but no history of bariatric surgery (control group-1 had BMI ≥ 35, control group-2 was not limited to patients with obesity). Used multivariate regression models to calculate odds ratio and 95% confidence interval of mortality and length of stay | Unspecified | N/A | In-hospital mortality rates: bariatric surgery group vs control group-1 (0.96% vs 1.86%, OR 0.52, 95% CI 0.35-0.77, p=0.0013), bariatric surgery group vs control group-2 (0.96% vs 1.86%, OR 0.52, 95% CI 0.35-0.77, | All patients 18+ years old with primary admission diagnosis of HF. Case group included all of these patients with hx of BS. Control group-1 included patients with no hx of BS with BMI 35+. Control group-2 included patients with no hx of BS + not exclusively with obesity | N/A | In-hopsital mortality rates after admission for HF were significantly lower in patients with history of bariatric surgery compared with both control groups. LOS was also significantly shorter in bariatric surgery group compared with both control groups |