Cargando…

Effectiveness of Gastric Bypass Versus Gastric Sleeve for Cardiovascular Disease: Protocol and Baseline Results for a Comparative Effectiveness Study

BACKGROUND: When compared with conventional weight loss strategies, bariatric surgery results in substantially greater durable weight loss and rates of disease remission. OBJECTIVE: The ENGAGE CVD (Effectiveness of Gastric Bypass versus Gastric Sleeve for Cardiovascular Disease) cohort study aimed t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Coleman, Karen J, Fischer, Heidi, Arterburn, David E, Barthold, Douglas, Barton, Lee J, Basu, Anirban, Courcoulas, Anita, Crawford, Cecelia L, Fedorka, Peter, Kim, Benjamin, Mun, Edward, Murali, Sameer, Reynolds, Kristi, Suh, Kangho, Wei, Rong, Yoon, Tae K, Zane, Robert
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7171566/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32249757
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/14936
_version_ 1783524096814874624
author Coleman, Karen J
Fischer, Heidi
Arterburn, David E
Barthold, Douglas
Barton, Lee J
Basu, Anirban
Courcoulas, Anita
Crawford, Cecelia L
Fedorka, Peter
Kim, Benjamin
Mun, Edward
Murali, Sameer
Reynolds, Kristi
Suh, Kangho
Wei, Rong
Yoon, Tae K
Zane, Robert
author_facet Coleman, Karen J
Fischer, Heidi
Arterburn, David E
Barthold, Douglas
Barton, Lee J
Basu, Anirban
Courcoulas, Anita
Crawford, Cecelia L
Fedorka, Peter
Kim, Benjamin
Mun, Edward
Murali, Sameer
Reynolds, Kristi
Suh, Kangho
Wei, Rong
Yoon, Tae K
Zane, Robert
author_sort Coleman, Karen J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: When compared with conventional weight loss strategies, bariatric surgery results in substantially greater durable weight loss and rates of disease remission. OBJECTIVE: The ENGAGE CVD (Effectiveness of Gastric Bypass versus Gastric Sleeve for Cardiovascular Disease) cohort study aimed to provide population-based, comprehensive, rigorous evidence for clinical and policy decision making regarding the choice between gastric bypass and gastric sleeve for overall cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk reduction, risk factor remission, and safety. METHODS: The cohort had 22,095 weight loss surgery patients from a large integrated health care system in Southern California assembled from 2009 to 2016 who were followed up through 2018. Bariatric surgery patients were followed up for the length of their membership in the health care system. Of the patients who had at least five years of follow-up (surgery between 2009 and 2013), 85.86% (13,774/16,043) could contribute to the outcome analyses for the ENGAGE CVD cohort. RESULTS: Patients in the ENGAGE CVD cohort were 44.6 (SD 11.4) years old, mostly women (17,718/22,095; 80.19%), with 18.94% (4185/22,095) non-Hispanic black and 41.80% (9235/22,095) Hispanic, and had an average BMI of 44.3 (SD 6.9) kg/m(2) at the time of surgery. When compared with patients who did not contribute data to the 5-year outcome analysis for the ENGAGE CVD cohort (2269/16,043; 14.14%), patients who contributed data (13,774/16,043; 85.86%) were older (P=.002), more likely to be women (P=.02), more likely to be non-Hispanic white (P<.001), more likely to have had an emergency department visit in the year before surgery (P=.006), less likely to have a mental illness before surgery (P<.001), and more likely to have had a CVD event at any time before surgery (P<.001). CONCLUSIONS: This study had one of the largest populations of gastric sleeve patients (n=13,459). The 5-year follow-up for those patients who had surgery between 2009 and 2013 was excellent for a retrospective cohort study at 85.86% (13,774/16,043). Unlike almost any study in the literature, the majority of the ENGAGE CVD cohort was racial and ethnic minority, providing a rare opportunity to study the effects of bariatric surgery for different racial and ethnic groups, some of whom have the highest rates of severe obesity in the United States. Finally, it also used state-of-the-art statistical and econometric comparative effectiveness methods to mimic the effect of random assignment and control for sources of confounding inherent in large observational studies. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): RR1-10.2196/14936
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7171566
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-71715662020-04-28 Effectiveness of Gastric Bypass Versus Gastric Sleeve for Cardiovascular Disease: Protocol and Baseline Results for a Comparative Effectiveness Study Coleman, Karen J Fischer, Heidi Arterburn, David E Barthold, Douglas Barton, Lee J Basu, Anirban Courcoulas, Anita Crawford, Cecelia L Fedorka, Peter Kim, Benjamin Mun, Edward Murali, Sameer Reynolds, Kristi Suh, Kangho Wei, Rong Yoon, Tae K Zane, Robert JMIR Res Protoc Protocol BACKGROUND: When compared with conventional weight loss strategies, bariatric surgery results in substantially greater durable weight loss and rates of disease remission. OBJECTIVE: The ENGAGE CVD (Effectiveness of Gastric Bypass versus Gastric Sleeve for Cardiovascular Disease) cohort study aimed to provide population-based, comprehensive, rigorous evidence for clinical and policy decision making regarding the choice between gastric bypass and gastric sleeve for overall cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk reduction, risk factor remission, and safety. METHODS: The cohort had 22,095 weight loss surgery patients from a large integrated health care system in Southern California assembled from 2009 to 2016 who were followed up through 2018. Bariatric surgery patients were followed up for the length of their membership in the health care system. Of the patients who had at least five years of follow-up (surgery between 2009 and 2013), 85.86% (13,774/16,043) could contribute to the outcome analyses for the ENGAGE CVD cohort. RESULTS: Patients in the ENGAGE CVD cohort were 44.6 (SD 11.4) years old, mostly women (17,718/22,095; 80.19%), with 18.94% (4185/22,095) non-Hispanic black and 41.80% (9235/22,095) Hispanic, and had an average BMI of 44.3 (SD 6.9) kg/m(2) at the time of surgery. When compared with patients who did not contribute data to the 5-year outcome analysis for the ENGAGE CVD cohort (2269/16,043; 14.14%), patients who contributed data (13,774/16,043; 85.86%) were older (P=.002), more likely to be women (P=.02), more likely to be non-Hispanic white (P<.001), more likely to have had an emergency department visit in the year before surgery (P=.006), less likely to have a mental illness before surgery (P<.001), and more likely to have had a CVD event at any time before surgery (P<.001). CONCLUSIONS: This study had one of the largest populations of gastric sleeve patients (n=13,459). The 5-year follow-up for those patients who had surgery between 2009 and 2013 was excellent for a retrospective cohort study at 85.86% (13,774/16,043). Unlike almost any study in the literature, the majority of the ENGAGE CVD cohort was racial and ethnic minority, providing a rare opportunity to study the effects of bariatric surgery for different racial and ethnic groups, some of whom have the highest rates of severe obesity in the United States. Finally, it also used state-of-the-art statistical and econometric comparative effectiveness methods to mimic the effect of random assignment and control for sources of confounding inherent in large observational studies. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): RR1-10.2196/14936 JMIR Publications 2020-04-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7171566/ /pubmed/32249757 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/14936 Text en ©Karen J Coleman, Heidi Fischer, David E Arterburn, Douglas Barthold, Lee J Barton, Anirban Basu, Anita Courcoulas, Cecelia L Crawford, Peter Fedorka, Benjamin Kim, Edward Mun, Sameer Murali, Kristi Reynolds, Kangho Suh, Rong Wei, Tae K Yoon, Robert Zane. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (http://www.researchprotocols.org), 06.04.2020. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Research Protocols, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.researchprotocols.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Protocol
Coleman, Karen J
Fischer, Heidi
Arterburn, David E
Barthold, Douglas
Barton, Lee J
Basu, Anirban
Courcoulas, Anita
Crawford, Cecelia L
Fedorka, Peter
Kim, Benjamin
Mun, Edward
Murali, Sameer
Reynolds, Kristi
Suh, Kangho
Wei, Rong
Yoon, Tae K
Zane, Robert
Effectiveness of Gastric Bypass Versus Gastric Sleeve for Cardiovascular Disease: Protocol and Baseline Results for a Comparative Effectiveness Study
title Effectiveness of Gastric Bypass Versus Gastric Sleeve for Cardiovascular Disease: Protocol and Baseline Results for a Comparative Effectiveness Study
title_full Effectiveness of Gastric Bypass Versus Gastric Sleeve for Cardiovascular Disease: Protocol and Baseline Results for a Comparative Effectiveness Study
title_fullStr Effectiveness of Gastric Bypass Versus Gastric Sleeve for Cardiovascular Disease: Protocol and Baseline Results for a Comparative Effectiveness Study
title_full_unstemmed Effectiveness of Gastric Bypass Versus Gastric Sleeve for Cardiovascular Disease: Protocol and Baseline Results for a Comparative Effectiveness Study
title_short Effectiveness of Gastric Bypass Versus Gastric Sleeve for Cardiovascular Disease: Protocol and Baseline Results for a Comparative Effectiveness Study
title_sort effectiveness of gastric bypass versus gastric sleeve for cardiovascular disease: protocol and baseline results for a comparative effectiveness study
topic Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7171566/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32249757
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/14936
work_keys_str_mv AT colemankarenj effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT fischerheidi effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT arterburndavide effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT bartholddouglas effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT bartonleej effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT basuanirban effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT courcoulasanita effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT crawfordcecelial effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT fedorkapeter effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT kimbenjamin effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT munedward effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT muralisameer effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT reynoldskristi effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT suhkangho effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT weirong effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT yoontaek effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy
AT zanerobert effectivenessofgastricbypassversusgastricsleeveforcardiovasculardiseaseprotocolandbaselineresultsforacomparativeeffectivenessstudy