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Preoperative Depression Status and 5 Year Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Outcomes in the PCORnet Bariatric Study Cohort

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Objective: To examine whether depression status before metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS) influenced 5–year weight loss, diabetes, and safety/utilization outcomes in the PCORnet Bariatric Study. Summary of Background Data: Research… Click to show full abstract

Objective: To examine whether depression status before metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS) influenced 5–year weight loss, diabetes, and safety/utilization outcomes in the PCORnet Bariatric Study. Summary of Background Data: Research on the impact of depression on MBS outcomes is inconsistent with few large, long–term studies. Methods: Data were extracted from 23 health systems on 36,871 patients who underwent sleeve gastrectomy (SG; n=16,158) or gastric bypass (RYGB; n=20,713) from 2005–2015. Patients with and without a depression diagnosis in the year before MBS were evaluated for % total weight loss (%TWL), diabetes outcomes, and postsurgical safety/utilization (reoperations, revisions, endoscopy, hospitalizations, mortality) at 1, 3, and 5 years after MBS. Results: 27.1% of SG and 33.0% of RYGB patients had preoperative depression, and they had more medical and psychiatric comorbidities than those without depression. At 5 years of follow-up, those with depression, versus those without depression, had slightly less %TWL after RYGB, but not after SG (between group difference = 0.42%TWL, P = 0.04). However, patients with depression had slightly larger HbA1c improvements after RYGB but not after SG (between group difference = – 0.19, P = 0.04). Baseline depression did not moderate diabetes remission or relapse, reoperations, revision, or mortality across operations; however, baseline depression did moderate the risk of endoscopy and repeat hospitalization across RYGB versus SG. Conclusions: Patients with depression undergoing RYGB and SG had similar weight loss, diabetes, and safety/utilization outcomes to those without depression. The effects of depression were clinically small compared to the choice of operation.

Keywords: year; depression; metabolic bariatric; depression status; bariatric surgery; outcomes pcornet

Journal Title: Annals of Surgery
Year Published: 2022

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