Cummings David E, Cohen Ricardo V
VA Puget Sound Health Care System and Diabetes and Obesity Center of Excellence, University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Center for Diabetes and Obesity, Oswaldo Cruz Hospital, São Paulo, Brazil.
Diabetes Care. 2016 Jun;39(6):924-33. doi: 10.2337/dc16-0350.
Global usage of bariatric surgery has been dictated for the past quarter century by National Institutes of Health recommendations restricting these operations to individuals with a BMI ≥35 kg/m(2). Strong evidence now demonstrates that bariatric procedures markedly improve or cause remission of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), in part through weight-independent mechanisms, and that baseline BMI does not predict surgical benefits on glycemic or cardiovascular outcomes. This impels consideration of such operations as "metabolic surgery," which is used expressly to treat T2DM, including among patients with a BMI <35 kg/m(2) who constitute the majority of people with diabetes worldwide. Here, we review available evidence to inform that consideration.
A meta-analysis of the 11 published randomized clinical trials (RCTs) directly comparing bariatric/metabolic surgery versus a variety of medical/lifestyle interventions for T2DM provides level 1A evidence that surgery is superior for T2DM remission, glycemic control, and HbA1c lowering. Importantly, this is equally true for patients whose baseline BMI is below or above 35 kg/m(2). Similar conclusions derive from meta-analyses of high-quality nonrandomized prospective comparisons. Meta-analysis of all pertinent published studies indicates that T2DM remission rates following bariatric/metabolic surgery are comparable above and below the 35 kg/m(2) BMI threshold. The safety, antidiabetes durability, and benefits on other cardiovascular risk factors from bariatric/metabolic surgery appear roughly comparable among patients with a BMI below or above 35 kg/m(2). Further studies are needed to extend long-term findings and measure "hard" macrovascular/microvascular outcomes and mortality in RCTs.
Extant data, including level 1A evidence from numerous RCTs, support new guidelines from the 2nd Diabetes Surgery Summit that advocate for the consideration of bariatric/metabolic surgery as one option, along with lifestyle and medical therapy, to treat T2DM among patients with a BMI <35 kg/m(2).
在过去的四分之一世纪里,美国国立卫生研究院的建议规定了减重手术的全球使用范围,将这些手术限制在体重指数(BMI)≥35kg/m²的个体。现在有强有力的证据表明,减重手术能显著改善或导致2型糖尿病(T2DM)缓解,部分是通过与体重无关的机制,而且基线BMI并不能预测手术对血糖或心血管结局的益处。这促使人们将此类手术视为“代谢手术”,专门用于治疗T2DM,包括在BMI<35kg/m²的患者中,而这些患者占全球糖尿病患者的大多数。在此,我们回顾现有证据以提供参考。
对11项已发表的随机临床试验(RCT)进行的荟萃分析直接比较了减重/代谢手术与各种针对T2DM的药物/生活方式干预措施,提供了1A级证据,表明手术在T2DM缓解、血糖控制和降低糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)方面更具优势。重要的是,对于基线BMI低于或高于35kg/m²的患者同样如此。类似的结论也来自高质量非随机前瞻性比较的荟萃分析。对所有相关已发表研究的荟萃分析表明,减重/代谢手术后T2DM缓解率在BMI 35kg/m²阈值上下相当。减重/代谢手术在BMI低于或高于35kg/m²的患者中,其安全性、抗糖尿病耐久性以及对其他心血管危险因素的益处大致相当。需要进一步研究以扩展长期研究结果,并在RCT中测量“硬”大血管/微血管结局和死亡率。
现有数据,包括来自众多RCT的1A级证据,支持第二届糖尿病手术峰会的新指南,该指南提倡将减重/代谢手术作为一种选择,与生活方式和药物治疗一起,用于治疗BMI<35kg/m²的T2DM患者。