More weight loss seen with gastric bypass than banding
A  gastric bypass operation called Roux-en-Y involves reducing stomach  size with staples and connecting the smaller "pouch" directly to the  small intestine. It is irreversible.
Gastric  banding, as its name implies, involves placing a band around part of the  stomach to reduce its size. This procedure is reversible, the  researchers noted.
"Both gastric banding and  gastric bypass are currently performed for morbid obesity," said lead  researcher Dr. Michel Suter, chief surgeon at Chablais Hospital in  Aigle.
"Bypass is more effective in terms of  directs results such as weight loss, but a bit more dangerous  immediately than banding," he said.
However, banding often leads to long-term complications requiring some sort of major re-operation, Suter said.
"In  addition, many bands are not going to stay in place for much more than  10 years; hence, banding is unlikely to be the only weight-loss  procedure the patient will be submitted to," he said. "Patients should  make a choice knowing this, and decide whether they accept a slightly  higher early risk to improve their results, or if they want the least  invasive procedure, but then accept a high risk of further surgery at a  later time."
The report was published in the Jan. 16 online edition of the Archives of Surgery.
For the study, Suter's team followed for six years 442 patients who had either gastric bypass surgery or banding.
Although  there were more early surgical complications among those who had  Roux-en-Y surgery, these patients lost more weight faster than those who  had gastric banding, the researchers found.
After  bypass surgery, about 17 percent of the patients had complications,  compared with more than 5 percent of those who underwent banding, the  researchers noted.
But at six years there were  more problems with gastric banding, including about 48 percent who had  weight gain or the procedure reversed, compared with about 12 percent  who had bypass surgery, the study found.
Gastric  banding was associated with more long-term complications (more than 42  percent versus 19 percent) and more new procedures than bypass surgery  (about 27 percent vs. 13 percent).
Cholesterol  levels among those who had gastric bypass surgery were consistently  lower than among those who had gastric banding, who saw no change over  time, the researchers add.
This finding  implies that blood sugar levels were also lower among those who  underwent gastric bypass surgery, the study authors said.
Suter is concerned that many patients are only offered banding and not told of its drawbacks.
"There is, in the United States, an extensive campaign promoting gastric banding as 'the solution' for obesity, which is far from being true," he said.
It  can result in significant weight loss, but it remains a surgical  procedure, and is certainly associated with significant risks, both in  the short and long term, Suter said.
"Patients  must be informed that surgery alone is not sufficient to achieve  significant weight loss, and they must be instructed about other things  they have to do such as changing their eating and lifestyle habits," he  said.
In addition, Suter said, "Patients  calling or referred for gastric banding must be informed about the other  available procedures for morbid obesity, and not offered band only, as  is the case in several places."
Depending on  the actual operation, either procedure costs between $10,000 and $20,000  plus follow-up costs, and insurance coverage is very inconsistent,  according to Dr. Edward Livingston, who serves as the Dr. Lee  Hudson-Robert R. Penn Chair in Surgery at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, in Dallas.
Hospital  stay for bypass is usually two days, and banding usually one day, but  this can vary depending on surgeon, hospital and complications.
Dr.  Jacques Himpens, from the European School of Laparoscopic Surgery at  Saint Pierre University Hospital in Brussels and author of an  accompanying journal editorial, is less concerned with a particular  procedure than with the specific surgeon.
"Not  all surgeons can do bypasses," he said. "Maybe they don't have the  skills or the experience, but in any case it's not the best option  because they are not up to it," he said. "That's the case for many  surgeons."
In addition, it is not clear what  the long-term results of a bypass are, because there is evidence that  although a bypass "cures" diabetes, it does come back after time,  Himpens said.
"The bypass is a very good  procedure, but not everyone can do it and we have to be very careful and  watch what the long-term effects of the procedure are," he said.
Also, while a gastric bypass causes changes in metabolism, banding does not, Himpens said.
"But  the good thing is that it is reversible. When you take out the band, no  harm has been done and you can still do another procedure if you need  to," he said.
However, among patients who  receive bands, only 40 percent retain them after 10 years, either  because of complications or the desire to have it removed, Himpens said.
On the Web:
www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/007199.htm, the U.S. National Library of Medicine has more on gastric bypass procedures.




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