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Defining Global Benchmarks in Elective Secondary Bariatric Surgery Comprising Conversional, Revisional, and Reversal Procedures

Authors :
Kazunori Kasama
Amalia Zapata
Aaron Lloyd
Camilo Boza
Yosuke Seki
Marko Kraljević
Henna Sammalkorpi
Jacques Himpens
Alec C. Beekley
Gerhard Prager
Daniel Gero
Raul J. Rosenthal
Marie Vannijvel
George Tadros
Sébastien Frey
Styliani Mantziari
Lisa Gensthaler
Andres San Martin
Marco Bueter
Ivana Raguz
Dimitri A. Raptis
Sietske Okkema
Ekhlas Bardisi
Kelvin Higa
Talar Tatarian
Ralph Peterli
Anne Juuti
Bruno Dillemans
Jeannette Widmer
Antonio J. Torres
Milo A. Puhan
René Vonlanthen
Pierre-Alain Clavien
Jean-Philippe Goreux
Antonio Iannelli
Emanuele Lo Menzo
Rajesh Aggarwal
Tom Wiggins
Ellen Deleus
Matias Sepulveda
Michel Suter
Eric J. Hazebroek
Matthias Lannoo
Paulina Salminen
Andreas Thalheimer
José Luis Garcia-Galocha
Richard Welbourn
Marianne Hollyman
Source :
Annals of surgery, vol. 274, no. 5, pp. 821-828
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2021.

Abstract

Objective To define "best possible" outcomes for secondary bariatric surgery (BS). Background Management of poor response and of long-term complications after BS is complex and under-investigated. Indications and types of reoperations vary widely and postoperative complication rates are higher compared to primary BS. Methods Out of 44,884 BS performed in 18 high-volume centers from 4 continents between 06/2013-05/2019, 5,349 (12%) secondary BS cases were identified. Twenty-one outcome benchmarks were established in low-risk patients, defined as the 75th percentile of the median outcome values of centers. Benchmark cases had no previous laparotomy, diabetes, sleep apnea, cardiopathy, renal insufficiency, inflammatory bowel disease, immunosuppression, thromboembolic events, BMI> 50 kg/m2 or age> 65 years. Results The benchmark cohort included 3143 cases, mainly females (85%), aged 43.8 ± 10 years, 8.4 ± 5.3 years after primary BS, with a BMI 35.2 ± 7 kg/m2. Main indications were insufficient weight loss (43%) and gastro-esophageal reflux disease/dysphagia (25%). 90-days postoperatively, 14.6% of benchmark patients presented ≥1 complication, mortality was 0.06% (n = 2). Significantly higher morbidity was observed in non-benchmark cases (OR 1.37) and after conversional/reversal or revisional procedures with gastrointestinal suture/stapling (OR 1.84). Benchmark cutoffs for conversional BS were ≤4.5% re-intervention, ≤8.3% re-operation 90-days postoperatively. At 2-years (IQR 1-3) 15.6% of benchmark patients required a reoperation. Conclusion Secondary BS is safe, although postoperative morbidity exceeds the established benchmarks for primary BS. The excess morbidity is due to an increased risk of gastrointestinal leakage and higher need for intensive care. The considerable rate of tertiary BS warrants expertise and future research to optimize the management of non-success after BS.

Details

ISSN :
15281140 and 00034932
Volume :
274
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ded71cf272eed6ee799654ee612130da
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/sla.0000000000005117