Yermilov Irina, McGory Marcia L, Shekelle Paul W, Ko Clifford Y, Maggard Melinda A
Department of Surgery, David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Obesity (Silver Spring). 2009 Aug;17(8):1521-7. doi: 10.1038/oby.2009.78. Epub 2009 Apr 2.
Careful selection of bariatric patients is critical for successful outcomes. In 1991, the NIH first established patient selection guidelines; however, some surgeons operate on individuals outside of these criteria, i.e., extreme age groups. We developed appropriateness criteria for the spectrum of patient characteristics including age, BMI, and severity of eight obesity-related comorbidities. Candidate criteria were developed using combinations of patient characteristics including BMI: > or =40 kg/m(2), 35-39, 32-34, 30-31, <30; age: 12-18, 19-55, 56-64, 65+ years old; and comorbidities: prediabetes, diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia, sleep apnea, venous stasis disease, chronic joint pain, and gastroesophageal reflux (plus severity level). Criteria were formally validated on their appropriateness of whether the benefits of surgery clearly outweighed the risks, by an expert panel using the RAND/UCLA modified Delphi method. Nearly all comorbidity severity criteria for patients with BMI > or =40 kg/m(2) or BMI = 35-39 kg/m(2) in intermediate age groups were found to be appropriate for surgery. In contrast, patients in the extreme age categories were considered appropriate surgical candidates under fewer conditions, primarily the more severe comorbidities, such as diabetes and hypertension. For patients with a BMI of 32-34, only the most severe category of diabetes (Hgb A1c >9, on maximal medical therapy), is an appropriate criterion for those aged 19-64, whereas many mild to moderate severity comorbidity categories are "inappropriate." There is overwhelming agreement among the panelists that the current evidence does not support performing bariatric surgery in lower BMI individuals (BMI <32). This is the first development of appropriateness criteria for bariatric surgery that includes severity categories of comorbidities. Only for the most severe degrees of comorbidities were adolescent and elderly patients deemed appropriate for surgery. Patient selection for bariatric procedures should include consideration of both patient age and comorbidity severity.
仔细挑选肥胖症患者对于手术成功至关重要。1991年,美国国立卫生研究院首次制定了患者选择指南;然而,一些外科医生对不符合这些标准的个体进行手术,即极端年龄组的患者。我们针对包括年龄、体重指数(BMI)以及八种肥胖相关合并症的严重程度等一系列患者特征制定了适用性标准。候选标准是通过综合患者特征制定的,包括BMI:≥40kg/m²、35 - 39、32 - 34、30 - 31、<30;年龄:12 - 18岁、19 - 55岁、56 - 64岁、65岁及以上;以及合并症:糖尿病前期、糖尿病、高血压、血脂异常、睡眠呼吸暂停、静脉淤滞性疾病、慢性关节疼痛和胃食管反流(加上严重程度级别)。一个专家小组使用兰德/加州大学洛杉矶分校改良德尔菲法,就手术益处是否明显超过风险这一适用性问题,对这些标准进行了正式验证。几乎所有BMI≥40kg/m²或BMI为35 - 39kg/m²的中年组患者的合并症严重程度标准都被认为适合手术。相比之下,极端年龄组的患者在较少条件下被视为合适的手术候选人,主要是那些更严重的合并症,如糖尿病和高血压。对于BMI为32 - 34的患者,只有最严重类型的糖尿病(糖化血红蛋白A1c>9,接受最大剂量药物治疗),对于19 - 64岁的患者才是合适的标准,而许多轻度至中度严重程度的合并症类别则“不合适”。专家小组成员一致认为,目前的证据不支持对BMI较低(BMI<32)的个体进行减肥手术。这是首次制定包括合并症严重程度类别的减肥手术适用性标准。只有对于最严重程度的合并症,青少年和老年患者才被认为适合手术。减肥手术的患者选择应同时考虑患者年龄和合并症严重程度。