TECHNICAL DEBATES: 'LOW BMI' OBESITY SURGERY: IS IT WORTHWHILE ? The guidelines for bariatric surgery have been established a long time ago: the criteria proposed by the National Institutes of Health -NIH- Consensus Conference in the United States, 1991, have been adopted by all national obesity surgery societies, and by the International Federation for Surgical Obesity (IFSO).The requested BMI for surgery is intangible: 40 kg per square-meter, or between 35 and 40 in case of co-morbidities (related diseases such as diabetes mellitus, hypertension, high cholesterol...).
Real obese patients with a BMI lower than that are not
eligible for surgery. Actually a minority of obese patients is actively seeking
surgical therapy, but some of them are borderline in terms of BMI and might
be positively impressed by the results of friends or relatives obtaining
good results after surgery. It is highly debated wether or not surgeons should
respond to such claims, regardless the reimbursement issue (in some countries like France, an application is made to get approval from health authorities).
Italian surgeons had the
courage to present their results in patients operated on 'outside of the usual
criteria' within the Italian National Registry of Obesity*. This series had 225
patients among 3319 patients operated on all over Italy, which accounts for 6,8%
of the bariatric procedures. It has been pointed out that some of these patients
had a previous failed bariatric procedure. More than half of the patients (109)
had a related comorbidity (mostly psychological disorders...). The vast majority
of the patients had the simplest procedure: the lap-banding. The resulting
weight-loss was satisfactory, with an average excess-weight-losss of 60% at 5
years. Early complications were expectingly rare, but long-term complications
were comparable to those of other bariatric patients: 9%. These late troubles
imposed re-interventions for removal of the prosthetic material, and one patient
died 20 months after surgery due to a pouch dilatation and subsequent gastric
perforation. This makes us question the ethical background of such therapeutic
proposals. Prospective and randomized studies should be initiated comparing
surgery to other conservative treatments in non morbid obese patients. For the
time being, the medical community stands for non surgical options, including
diet support. Besides, long-term results of surgical procedures are still
debated, and some papers have stressed problems due to the material. Improvement
of the quality of life and comorbidities are also under scrutiny. There is no
strong consensus so far, and available recommandations from scientific societies
are still valid. However, 'less invasive procedures' (such as lap-banding, or
gastric stimulation in the near future?) have led some surgeons to more
liberality, whereas more invasive techniques (bypass) should be
excluded.
* Angrisani L. Lapband system. Results of a
multicenter study on patients with BMI<35 kg/m2. IFSO
2002.
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