1. Decision Regret after Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy-5 Years' Perspective.
- Author
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Bartosiak K, Janik MR, Kowalewski P, Walędziak M, and Kwiatkowski A
- Subjects
- Emotions, Gastrectomy, Humans, Poland, Quality of Life, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Laparoscopy, Obesity, Morbid surgery
- Abstract
Introduction: Patient's satisfaction after weight loss surgery is in the research spotlight. However, there are still no quantitative data regarding whether patients regret their decision to undergo laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (SG)., Objectives: The present study aimed to evaluate whether patients regret their decision to undergo SG 5 years after surgery. The secondary objective was to identify whether weight loss and a higher quality of life (QoL) score correlate with the regret expressed by patients., Setting: Military Hospital, Poland METHODS: A telephone survey was carried out among patients 5 years after surgery. Patient satisfaction regarding their decision to undergo SG was assessed using the Decision Regret Scale. QoL scores were determined using the 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36)., Results: One hundred and four patients who answered a full telephone survey were enrolled in the study. Change in body mass index (ΔBMI) was 12.31±6.2, excess body mass index loss (%EBMIL) was 55.45%±25.52%, and percent total weight loss (%TWL) was 25.20%±11.7%. At the 5-year postoperative telephone survey, the mean general health score was 50.96±14.0 and the mean regret score was 32.33±13.24 (range, 25-85). A statistically significant negative correlation was observed between %EBMIL and regret score (r=-0.435; p<0.001). There was a significant negative association between regret score and energy/fatigue QoL (r=-0.205; p=0.040). Only eight patients (7.69%) scored >50 on the Decision Regret Scale, which was considered to represent overall regret for their decision., Conclusion: Our study suggests that, in general, patients did not regret their decision to undergo SG., Key Points: The majority of patients did not regret their decision to undergo SG. There was a statistically significant negative correlation between weight loss and patients' feelings of regret. Energy/fatigue QoL was the strongest correlate of whether patients regretted their decision to undergo SG., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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