Lauriane Edin, Marc-Henri Jean, Lucie Planche, Barbara Feigel-Guiller, Emeric Abet
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: A steady increase in the prevalence of obesity in patients over 50 years old has led to a growing number of laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) in this population. Yet the efficacy for those patients is still debated. We evaluated the impact of age on the short-term results of LSG. Methods: This retrospective study analyzed patients who underwent LSG between 2013 and 2020. Patients were divided into three groups: young (≤35 years, n = 35), intermediate (36-49 years, n = 58), and older age (≥50 years, n = 52). Body mass index (BMI), total weight loss (TWL), excess weight loss (EWL), and obesity-related comorbidities (ORC) were assessed 2 years after LSG. Results: The mean reduction in BMI, TWL, and EWL was 9.5 kg/m2, 21%-51.7% in the "older age" group, 11.9 kg/m2, 26.3%-64.6% in the "intermediate" group, and 13.3 kg/m2, 30.1%-74.4% in the "young" group, respectively. The LSG failure rate (EWL <50%) was 48.1% in the "older age" group, higher than in the "young" group (14.3%) (P = .001). The rate of remission or improvement in hypertension (HTN) was 31% in the ≥50 age group, significantly lower than in the other groups (36-49 years: 58%, ≤35 years: 100%) (P = .034). There was no significant difference between the groups in terms of other ORC. 10.5% of patients were lost to follow-up. Conclusion: Age appears to have a significant negative impact on weight loss results two years after LSG, with no impact on remission or improvement in ORC other than HTN.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Laparoendoscopic & Advanced Surgical Techniques (JLAST) is the leading international peer-reviewed journal for practicing surgeons who want to keep up with the latest thinking and advanced surgical technologies in laparoscopy, endoscopy, NOTES, and robotics. The Journal is ideally suited to surgeons who are early adopters of new technology and techniques. Recognizing that many new technologies and techniques have significant overlap with several surgical specialties, JLAST is the first journal to focus on these topics both in general and pediatric surgery, and includes other surgical subspecialties such as: urology, gynecologic surgery, thoracic surgery, and more.