Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore; Biostatistics & Modelling Domain, Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, Singapore.
UW Medicine Diabetes Institute, Department of Medicine, Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology, and Nutrition, and Weight Management Program, Veteran Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Lancet. 2021 May 15;397(10287):1830-1841. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(21)00591-2. Epub 2021 May 6.
Metabolic-bariatric surgery delivers substantial weight loss and can induce remission or improvement of obesity-related risks and complications. However, more robust estimates of its effect on long-term mortality and life expectancy-especially stratified by pre-existing diabetes status-are needed to guide policy and facilitate patient counselling. We compared long-term survival outcomes of severely obese patients who received metabolic-bariatric surgery versus usual care.
We did a prespecified one-stage meta-analysis using patient-level survival data reconstructed from prospective controlled trials and high-quality matched cohort studies. We searched PubMed, Scopus, and MEDLINE (via Ovid) for randomised trials, prospective controlled studies, and matched cohort studies comparing all-cause mortality after metabolic-bariatric surgery versus non-surgical management of obesity published between inception and Feb 3, 2021. We also searched grey literature by reviewing bibliographies of included studies as well as review articles. Shared-frailty (ie, random-effects) and stratified Cox models were fitted to compare all-cause mortality of adults with obesity who underwent metabolic-bariatric surgery compared with matched controls who received usual care, taking into account clustering of participants at the study level. We also computed numbers needed to treat, and extrapolated life expectancy using Gompertz proportional-hazards modelling. The study protocol is prospectively registered on PROSPERO, number CRD42020218472.
Among 1470 articles identified, 16 matched cohort studies and one prospective controlled trial were included in the analysis. 7712 deaths occurred during 1·2 million patient-years. In the overall population consisting 174 772 participants, metabolic-bariatric surgery was associated with a reduction in hazard rate of death of 49·2% (95% CI 46·3-51·9, p<0·0001) and median life expectancy was 6·1 years (95% CI 5·2-6·9) longer than usual care. In subgroup analyses, both individuals with (hazard ratio 0·409, 95% CI 0·370-0·453, p<0·0001) or without (0·704, 0·588-0·843, p<0·0001) baseline diabetes who underwent metabolic-bariatric surgery had lower rates of all-cause mortality, but the treatment effect was considerably greater for those with diabetes (between-subgroup I 95·7%, p<0·0001). Median life expectancy was 9·3 years (95% CI 7·1-11·8) longer for patients with diabetes in the surgery group than the non-surgical group, whereas the life expectancy gain was 5·1 years (2·0-9·3) for patients without diabetes. The numbers needed to treat to prevent one additional death over a 10-year time frame were 8·4 (95% CI 7·8-9·1) for adults with diabetes and 29·8 (21·2-56·8) for those without diabetes. Treatment effects did not appear to differ between gastric bypass, banding, and sleeve gastrectomy (I 3·4%, p=0·36). By leveraging the results of this meta-analysis and other published data, we estimated that every 1·0% increase in metabolic-bariatric surgery utilisation rates among the global pool of metabolic-bariatric candidates with and without diabetes could yield 5·1 million and 6·6 million potential life-years, respectively.
Among adults with obesity, metabolic-bariatric surgery is associated with substantially lower all-cause mortality rates and longer life expectancy than usual obesity management. Survival benefits are much more pronounced for people with pre-existing diabetes than those without.
None.
代谢减重手术可显著减轻体重,并可诱导肥胖相关风险和并发症的缓解或改善。然而,为了指导政策制定和方便患者咨询,我们需要更有力的估计其对长期死亡率和预期寿命的影响,尤其是按预先存在的糖尿病状态进行分层。我们比较了接受代谢减重手术与常规护理的严重肥胖患者的长期生存结果。
我们使用前瞻性对照试验和高质量匹配队列研究重建的患者水平生存数据进行了预先设定的单阶段荟萃分析。我们在 PubMed、Scopus 和 MEDLINE(通过 Ovid)中搜索了自成立以来至 2021 年 2 月 3 日发表的比较代谢减重手术后与非手术治疗肥胖的全因死亡率的随机试验、前瞻性对照研究和匹配队列研究。我们还通过查阅纳入研究的参考文献和综述文章来检索灰色文献。采用共享脆弱性(即随机效应)和分层 Cox 模型来比较接受代谢减重手术的肥胖成年人与接受常规护理的匹配对照组的全因死亡率,同时考虑了参与者在研究水平上的聚类。我们还计算了需要治疗的人数,并使用 Gompertz 比例风险模型推断预期寿命。研究方案在 PROSPERO 上预先注册,编号为 CRD42020218472。
在 1470 篇文章中,有 16 项匹配队列研究和一项前瞻性对照试验被纳入分析。在 174772 名参与者的 120 万患者年中,有 7712 人死亡。在包括的 174772 名参与者在内的总人群中,代谢减重手术与死亡风险降低 49.2%(95%CI 46.3-51.9,p<0.0001)和预期寿命延长 6.1 年(95%CI 5.2-6.9)相关。在亚组分析中,基线时患有(危险比 0.409,95%CI 0.370-0.453,p<0.0001)或不患有(0.704,0.588-0.843,p<0.0001)糖尿病的患者接受代谢减重手术后全因死亡率较低,但糖尿病患者的治疗效果明显更大(I 95.7%,p<0.0001)。与非手术组相比,手术组中患有糖尿病的患者预期寿命延长了 9.3 年(95%CI 7.1-11.8),而无糖尿病的患者预期寿命延长了 5.1 年(2.0-9.3)。在 10 年时间框架内,每预防一例额外死亡,需要治疗的人数分别为糖尿病患者 8.4(95%CI 7.8-9.1)和无糖尿病患者 29.8(21.2-56.8)。治疗效果似乎在胃旁路手术、带术和袖状胃切除术之间没有差异(I 3.4%,p=0.36)。通过利用这项荟萃分析和其他已发表数据的结果,我们估计,全球代谢减重候选人群中代谢减重手术使用率每增加 1.0%,患有和不患有糖尿病的患者分别可能获得 510 万和 660 万潜在寿命年。
在肥胖成年人中,代谢减重手术与显著较低的全因死亡率和较长的预期寿命相关,与常规肥胖管理相比。对于预先存在糖尿病的患者,生存获益比没有糖尿病的患者更为显著。
无。