Anja Hilbert, Annika Strömer, Christian Staerk, Ben Schreglmann, Thomas Mansfeld, Johannes Sander, Florian Seyfried, Stefan Kaiser, Christine Stroh, Arne Dietrich, Ricarda Schmidt, Andreas Mayr
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: Obesity surgery (OS) results in substantial, albeit heterogeneous, long-term improvements in weight and mental health, with unclear trajectories and their associations. This study examined multivariate trajectories of weight, psychopathology, and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) after OS, and their prospective association with long-term health outcomes.
Method: In the prospective multicenter Psychosocial Registry of Obesity Surgery, N = 856 patients were classified into multivariate trajectory classes using latent class linear mixed models, based on assessments of weight, depression, eating disorder psychopathology, and HRQOL at baseline and annually 1-5 years following OS. The prognostic significance of trajectory classes for 6-year follow-up was examined. Multivariate trajectory modeling was compared with univariate weight trajectory modeling for concordance and prognostic significance.
Results: We identified three trajectory classes of low (I, 2.8%), medium (II, 89.1%), and high (III, 8.1%) sustainability 1-5 years after OS, indicating high (I) or gradual deterioration (II) or further improvement (III) after initial improvement of indicators. The low sustainability class (I) reached nadir improvements earliest. Consistently, trajectory classes were prospectively associated with differential clinically significant improvement in weight and mental health at the 6-year follow-up. Multivariate trajectory modeling was discordant with univariate weight trajectory modeling and showed greater predictive value for health outcomes at the 6-year follow-up.
Discussion: Patients who achieve nadir improvements in weight and mental health early may require clinical attention to prevent long-term relapse. Monitoring changes in the first years after OS appears essential to identify patients in need of additional intervention, ideally using indicators beyond weight, such as mental health.
期刊介绍:
Articles featured in the journal describe state-of-the-art scientific research on theory, methodology, etiology, clinical practice, and policy related to eating disorders, as well as contributions that facilitate scholarly critique and discussion of science and practice in the field. Theoretical and empirical work on obesity or healthy eating falls within the journal’s scope inasmuch as it facilitates the advancement of efforts to describe and understand, prevent, or treat eating disorders. IJED welcomes submissions from all regions of the world and representing all levels of inquiry (including basic science, clinical trials, implementation research, and dissemination studies), and across a full range of scientific methods, disciplines, and approaches.