减肥或代谢手术后糖尿病缓解的预测

J. Y. Park
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引用次数: 0

摘要

减肥手术已经从治疗病态肥胖的外科措施演变为治疗以2型糖尿病为代表的代谢综合征的划时代疗法。许多临床试验一致主张进行减肥或代谢手术,而不是非手术干预,证明不仅在符合传统减肥手术标准(体重指数[BMI]>35kg/m2)的病态肥胖患者中,而且在不太肥胖甚至单纯超重的患者中,代谢结果明显优越。然而,并不是所有的糖尿病患者都能达到最理想的结果,即糖尿病缓解,代谢手术后和代谢手术的候选者应在术前对风险效益比的综合评估的基础上仔细选择。代谢手术后糖尿病缓解的预测因子可根据作用机制大致分为2组;1) 保留胰腺β细胞功能的指标,如年龄较小、糖尿病持续时间较短和C肽水平较高,以及2)这些指标代表了降低胰岛素抵抗的潜在储备,如较高的基线BMI和内脏脂肪面积。通过合并这些预测因子,已经提出了几种糖尿病缓解的预测模型,以指导临床医生和患者的联合决策过程。其中,DiaRem、ABCD和个体化代谢外科(IMS)评分3个模型提供了直观的评分系统,可在常规临床实践中简单使用,并已在独立的外部队列中得到验证。这些预测模型需要在不同种族中进一步验证,以确保其普遍适用性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Prediction of Diabetes Remission after Bariatric or Metabolic Surgery
Bariatric surgery has evolved from the surgical measure to treat morbid obesity into the epochal remedy to treat metabolic syndrome as a whole, which is represented by type 2 diabetes. Numerous clinical trials have unanimously advocated bariatric or metabolic surgery over the non-surgical interventions, demonstrating markedly superior metabolic outcomes not only in morbidly obese patients who satisfy traditional criteria for bariatric surgery (body mass index [BMI] > 35kg/m 2 ) but also in less obese or even in simply overweight patients. Nevertheless, not all the diabetic patients can achieve the most desirable outcomes, that is, diabetes remission, after metabolic surgery and candidates for metabolic surgery should be selected carefully based on the comprehensive preoperative assessment of the risk-benefit ratio. Predictors for diabetes remission after metabolic surgery can be largely classified into 2 groups based the mechanism of action; 1) indices for the preserved pancreatic beta-cell function, such as younger age, shorter duration of diabetes, and higher C-peptide level, and 2) those represent the potential reserve for reduction in insulin resistance, such as higher baseline BMI, and visceral fat area. Several prediction models for diabetes remission have been suggested by merging these predictors to guide clinicians and patients’ joint decision-making process. Among them, 3 models, DiaRem, ABCD, and Individualized Metabolic Surgery (IMS) scores provide intuitive scoring systems which can be simply utilized in the routine clinical practice and have been validated in the independent external cohort. These prediction models need further validation in the various different ethnicities to ensure the universal applicability.
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