New
Service for TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
readers...roll mouse over, click on
highlighted links in stories to review items
from Amazon
Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Overweight patients with Diabetes appear
more likely to achieve remission with
Weight-Loss surgery
Newswise — Preliminary research indicates that
obese patients with type 2 diabetes who had
gastric banding surgery lost more weight and
had a higher likelihood of diabetes
remission compared to patients who used
conventional methods for weight loss and
diabetes control, according to a study in
the January 23 issue ofJAMA.
“Obesity and type 2 diabetes are likely to be the
2 greatest public health problems of the
coming decades. The conditions are strongly
linked, with the increased prevalence of
diabetes correlating with the increased
prevalence of obesity,” the authors write.
Weight control is perhaps the most important
aspect of type 2 diabetes management. Recent
evidence indicates that improvement in blood
glucose control is related to the degree of
weight loss.
Currently available lifestyle and pharmacological
strategies provide only small to modest
levels of weight loss, a problem compounded
by patients with diabetes experiencing
greater difficulty in losing weight than
those without diabetes.
Significant sustained weight loss as a result of
bariatric surgery has never been formally
studied as a treatment for type 2 diabetes
in obese participants, according to
background information in the article.
John B. Dixon, M.B.B.S., Ph.D., of Monash
University, Melbourne, Australia, and
colleagues conducted a 2-year trial
involving 60 obese participants (body mass
index [BMI] greater than 30, less than 40)
to compare surgically induced weight loss
with conventional therapy for the management
of type 2 diabetes.
Patients were randomized to receive either
conventional diabetes therapy with a focus
on weight loss by lifestyle change or
laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding with
conventional diabetes care. Of the 60
patients enrolled, 55 (92 percent) completed
the 2-year follow-up.
The researchers found that remission of type 2
diabetes was achieved by 26 study
participants (43 percent) at two years, with
22/30 (73 percent) from the surgical program
and 4/30 (13 percent) from the
conventional-therapy program.
This represented 76 percent and 15 percent
remission rates for those in the surgery and
conventional-therapy groups, respectively.
Greater percentage of weight loss at two years
and lower baseline HbA1c values (hemoglobin
used primarily to identify the average
plasma glucose concentration) were
independently associated with remission, but
percentage of weight loss alone explained
most of the variance.
“After 2 years, the surgical group displayed a 5
times higher remission rate and 4 times
greater reduction in HbA1C values than the
conventional-therapy group,” the authors
write.
The surgical group achieved an average 20.7
percent body weight loss at two years,
compared with 1.7 percent among the
conventional-therapy group, representing a
loss of 62.5 percent of excess weight (using
BMI of 25 as ideal weight) in the surgical
group compared with 4.3 percent in the
conventional-therapy group.
There were no serious complications in either
group.
“An important finding of this study is that
degree of weight loss, not the method,
appears to be the major driver of glycemic
improvement and diabetes remission in obese
participants. This has important
implications, as it suggests that intensive
weight-loss therapy may be a more effective
first step in the management of diabetes
than simple lifestyle change. This study
shows that few participants achieved
remission with a body weight loss of less
than 10 percent, a level expected to produce
important health benefits,” the researchers
add.
“While caution is required in interpreting the
longer-term benefits of surgery and weight
loss, this study presents strong evidence to
support the early consideration of
surgically induced loss of weight in the
treatment of obese patients with type 2
diabetes,” they conclude.
(JAMA. 2008;299[3]:316-323. Available pre-embargo
to the media at www.jamamedia.org)
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for
additional information, including other
authors, author contributions and
affiliations, financial disclosures, funding
and support, etc.
Editorial: Gastrointestinal Surgery as a
Treatment for Diabetes
In an accompanying editorial, David E. Cummings,
M.D., and David R. Flum, M.D., M.P.H., of
the University of Washington, Seattle,
comment on the findings of Dixon and
colleagues.
“… there is much to learn about surgical
treatments for diabetes. Researchers are
striving to elucidate surgical mechanisms of
diabetes improvement, hoping ultimately to
harness the effects of ‘surgery in a
pill’—i.e., a formulation providing the
desired effects without operative risks.
Policy and health care leaders are grappling
with the costs and risks of surgical
interventions, which must be balanced
against the costs and risks of not taking
advantage of surgically induced diabetes
remission, in the face of an expanding
pandemic. Addressing these issues requires
time and resources, but in this era of
advanced diabetes research, the insights
already beginning to be gained by studying
surgical interventions for diabetes may be
the most profound since the discovery of
insulin. As a result, the future looks
brighter for patients.”