(Press-News.org) Metabolic or bariatric surgery may be more effective than standard medical treatments for the long-term control of type 2 diabetes in obese patients, according to a new study by King's College London and the Universita Cattolica in Rome, Italy. The study, published in the Lancet, is the first to provide data on five-year outcomes of surgery from a randomized clinical trial specifically designed to compare this new approach against standard medical therapy for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.
A number of studies have shown that bariatric or weight-loss surgery can result in dramatic improvement of type-2 diabetes in obese patients, supporting the idea that surgery could be used to treat this disease. Randomised controlled trials have shown that metabolic surgery is more effective than conventional treatment for the short-term control of type-2 diabetes. However, no trials have yet provided information on longer-term outcomes.
The new study followed a group of diabetic patients from Italy aged 30-60 with a body-mass index (BMI) of 35 kg/m² or more who were randomly assigned to receive either conventional medical treatment for type-2 diabetes (20 patients) or surgery by gastric bypass (20) or biliopancreatic diversion (20). Gastric bypass involves shrinking the size of the stomach and rerouting the upper part of the small intestine, whilst biliopancreatic diversion involves a more extensive bypassing of the intestine.
Of the 60 patients enrolled on the trial, 53 completed the five-year follow-up which looked at the durability of diabetes remission, defined as achievement of a glycated haemaglobin A1c (HbA1c) concentration of 6.5% or less without the need for drugs for at least one year. Additional outcome measures included relapse of hyperglycaemia (high blood sugar); use of anti-diabetic medication (glucose-lowering drugs and insulin) and cardiovascular medication (blood pressure and lipid-lowering drugs); changes in body weight, BMI and waist circumference; blood pressure; cholesterol; cardiovascular risk; quality of life, diabetes-related complications and long-term surgical complications.
Overall, 19 (50%) of the 38 surgical patients maintained diabetes remission at five years, compared with none of the 15 medically treated patients. Regardless of remission, surgical patients had generally lower levels of blood glucose than medically treated ones. Throughout the study period, surgical patients also used significantly less anti-diabetic and cardiovascular medication. The estimated cardiovascular risk at Year 5 for surgical patients was roughly half that of patients receiving conventional treatment. Surgery was also associated with better quality-of-life scores.
There was no mortality and no major long-term complications after surgery. Biliopancreatic diversion resulted in greater remission rates of diabetes compared to gastric bypass at Year 5 (67% vs 37%); however, gastric bypass was associated with fewer significant nutritional side effects and better quality of life scores, suggesting that gastric bypass may have a better risk-to-benefit profile in patients with diabetes.
Half of the patients who had initial diabetes remission experienced relapse of mild hyperglycaemia five year after surgery. For this reason, the authors caution that monitoring of glycaemia should continue in all patients who experience disease remission after bariatric surgery.
However, the patients who experienced relapse of hyperglycemia maintained a mean HbA1c of 6.7% (indicating adequate control of diabetes) with just diet and either metformin or no medication, whereas before surgery the same patients had HbA1c greater than 7.0% (indicating inadequate control) despite taking multiple glucose-lowering drugs and/or insulin. Overall, more than 80% of surgically-treated patients maintained the American Diabetes Association's treatment goal of a glycated haemoglobin A1c concentration below 7.0%, with little or no need for anti-diabetic drugs.
'The ability of surgery to greatly reduce the need for insulin and other drugs suggests that surgical therapy is a cost-effective approach to treating type-2 diabetes', says Professor Francesco Rubino, senior author of this study and Chair of Bariatric and Metabolic Surgery at King's College London and a Consultant Surgeon at King's College Hospital in London, UK.
Fewer diabetes-related complications were also observed in surgical patients in this study; however, the authors caution that the limitations of this trial, especially its relatively small sample size, do not allow definitive conclusions about the ability of surgery to reduce diabetes complications (e.g. heart attacks, strokes, kidney disease).
Professor Geltrude Mingrone, first author of the study who is a Professor of Internal Medicine at the Universita Cattolica in Rome and a Professor of Diabetes and Nutrition at King's College London, says: 'The lower incidence of typical diabetes complications in this study is in line with previous findings from long-term non-randomized studies; however, larger and ideally multicentre randomized trials are needed to definitively confirm that surgery can reduce diabetes morbidity and mortality compared to standard medical treatment. Nevertheless, surgery appears to dramatically reduce risk factors of cardiovascular disease.'
Surgical patients in this study lost more weight than medically treated patients; however, weight changes did not predict remission of hyperglycemia or relapse after surgery, suggesting that mechanisms other than weight loss are implicated in the effects of surgery on diabetes.
Professor Rubino's earlier experimental studies in rodents provided initial evidence that modifications of gastric and intestinal anatomy can exert direct effects on the regulation of glucose metabolism. He says: 'The results of this study add to a growing body of evidence showing that the gastrointestinal tract is a rational biological target for antidiabetic interventions and support implementation of surgery as a standard option in the treatment of type 2 diabetes.'
INFORMATION:
The 3rd World Congress on Interventional Therapies for Type 2 Diabetes and 2nd Diabetes Surgery Summit will be held in London, UK on 28-30 of September 2015. The Congress and Summit are hosted by King's College London and are organized in partnership with world-leading diabetes organizations. For more information, please visit http://www.wcitt2d.org/
Astronomers from the University of Cambridge have developed a new, highly accurate method of measuring the distances between stars, which could be used to measure the size of the galaxy, enabling greater understanding of how it evolved.
Using a technique which searches out stellar 'twins', the researchers have been able to measure distances between stars with far greater precision than is possible using typical model-dependent methods. The technique could be a valuable complement to the Gaia satellite - which is creating a three-dimensional map of the sky over five years ...
Many doctors working in India's private hospitals are under pressure to carry out unnecessary tests and procedures to meet revenue targets, according to The BMJ this week.
In a special report published today, Meera Kay, a journalist in Bangalore, asks what can be done about financial targets for doctors working in profit driven hospitals that lead to expensive but unnecessary tests and surgery that also come with risk of harm?
According to Dr Gautam Mistry, a cardiologist in Kolkata, such unethical practices are widely known about in medical circles but public discourse ...
Among 51 military service members who experienced severe acute kidney injury during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, 88% of the injuries were due to blasts or projectiles.
Twenty-two percent of the patients died within 60 days. Although still high, this mortality rate is significantly less than might be expected historically.
The majority of survivors completely recovered their kidney function.
Washington, DC (September 3, 2015) -- Acute kidney injury (AKI) leading to an abrupt or rapid decline in kidney function is a serious and increasingly prevalent condition. While ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Using a new technique to analyze 52 years of international conflict, researchers suggest that there may be no such thing as a "democratic peace."
In addition, a model developed with this new technique was found to predict international conflict five and even ten years in the future better than any existing model.
Democratic peace is the widely held theory that democracies are less likely to go to war against each other than countries with other types of government.
In the new study, researchers found that economic trade relationships and participation ...
Researchers at University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have documented the accuracy of three new tests for more rapidly diagnosing drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis (TB), which are much harder and more expensive to treat and which, experts say, represent a major threat to global public health.
The study is published online in the current issue of PLOS ONE.
"Our study shows that TB testing that once took two to three months can now be done in as little as a day," said co-author Richard Garfein, PhD, professor in the Division of Global Public Health ...
Earth's species are disappearing at an astonishing--and troubling--rate. As human activity continues to put pressure on ecosystems around the world, the rate of loss continues to climb. How we slow this devastating loss and protect the enormous number of species on Earth is of considerable importance, and debate.
Unfortunately, it is not feasible to simply protect everything. Limited funds require conservation planners and policy makers to prioritize the preservation of specific regions and ecosystems. An often-used strategy is to identify areas of high species richness ...
September 3, 2015 - Men and women exposed in early gestation to the man-made Ukrainian Famine of 1932-33 in regions with extreme food shortages were 1.5 times more likely to be diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes in adulthood. In regions with severe famine there was a 1.3 fold rise in the odds of Type 2 diabetes, and there was no diabetes increase among individuals born in regions with no famine.
Researchers at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health, the Komisarenko Institute of Endocrinology and Metabolism in Kiev, Ukraine, and the Cheboratev Institute of Gerontology ...
MADISON, Wis. -- "Gaydar" -- the purported ability to infer whether people are gay or straight based on their appearance -- seemed to get a scientific boost from a 2008 study that concluded people could accurately guess someone's sexual orientation based on photographs of their faces.
In a new paper published in the Journal of Sex Research, researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison challenge what they call "the gaydar myth." William Cox, an assistant scientist in the Department of Psychology and the lead author, says gaydar isn't accurate and is actually a harmful ...
The gut is an important reservoir for drug-resistant bacteria responsible for life-threatening hospital-acquired infections. A study in mice published on September 3rd in PLOS Pathogens reports that two of the most common antibiotic-resistant bacterial species circulating in hospitals occupy and effectively share the same location in the gut, and that they can be eliminated by fecal transplantation of a healthy gut microbiome.
Eric Pamer, from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, USA, and colleagues, investigated the interactions between vancomycin-resistant ...
Much like birds fly in flocks to conserve energy, dolphins swim in pods to mate and find food, and colonies of ants create complex nests to protect their queens, immune cells engage in coordinated behavior to wipe out viruses like the flu. That's according to a new study published today in the journal Science by researchers at the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry.
The findings reveal, for the first time, how immune cells work together to get to their final destination - the site of an injury or infection. The body is expansive and a virus or bacteria ...