Reversal of Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass: A Multi-Centric Analysis of Indications, Techniques, and Surgical Outcomes.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_38CAE2FF637E
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Reversal of Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass: A Multi-Centric Analysis of Indications, Techniques, and Surgical Outcomes.
Journal
Obesity surgery
ISSN
1708-0428 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0960-8923
Publication state
Published
Issued date
02/2025
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
35
Number
2
Pages
471-480
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Multicenter Study
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Roux-en-Y gastric bypass may present long-term complications that require revisional surgery or even reversal to normal anatomy. Data on the indications, surgical technique, and outcomes of RYGB reversal remain scarce.
We identified 48 cases of RYGB reversals with complete 90-day follow-up within a multi-centric international retrospective database of elective secondary bariatric surgery. The operations were performed between 2010 and 2024 in high-volume referral centers in Europe and USA. Data were collected on body weight, associated diseases, and on surgical outcomes up to 1-year postoperatively.
Patients were mainly female (81.3%) with a median age of 50 years (IQR 39-56). RYGB reversal was performed 7 years (median) after primary RYGB in patients with a BMI of 23.9 kg/m <sup>2</sup> (IQR 20-27). Half of the patients underwent at least 1 bariatric revision before the reversal. Main indications for reversal were dumping syndrome (33.3%), excessive weight loss (29.2%), marginal ulcer (14.6%), malabsorption (12.5%), and abdominal pain (10.4%). Rate of conversion to open surgery was 8.3%, and the postoperative complications during the first year reached 50%, including 31.3% Clavien-Dindo grade I-II, 16.7% grade III-IV complications, and one death. At 1 year, the mean BMI of the cohort increased by 18% to 28.25 kg/m <sup>2</sup> ; only 1 patient reached pre-RYGB BMI.
Although RYGB is a theoretically reversible procedure, normal anatomy is re-established only in selected cases which are refractory to medical therapy and often also to revisional bariatric surgery. RYGB reversals entail high morbidity, while the extent of recurrent weight gain at 1-year post-reversal seems to allow patients to remain below the threshold of severe obesity.
We identified 48 cases of RYGB reversals with complete 90-day follow-up within a multi-centric international retrospective database of elective secondary bariatric surgery. The operations were performed between 2010 and 2024 in high-volume referral centers in Europe and USA. Data were collected on body weight, associated diseases, and on surgical outcomes up to 1-year postoperatively.
Patients were mainly female (81.3%) with a median age of 50 years (IQR 39-56). RYGB reversal was performed 7 years (median) after primary RYGB in patients with a BMI of 23.9 kg/m <sup>2</sup> (IQR 20-27). Half of the patients underwent at least 1 bariatric revision before the reversal. Main indications for reversal were dumping syndrome (33.3%), excessive weight loss (29.2%), marginal ulcer (14.6%), malabsorption (12.5%), and abdominal pain (10.4%). Rate of conversion to open surgery was 8.3%, and the postoperative complications during the first year reached 50%, including 31.3% Clavien-Dindo grade I-II, 16.7% grade III-IV complications, and one death. At 1 year, the mean BMI of the cohort increased by 18% to 28.25 kg/m <sup>2</sup> ; only 1 patient reached pre-RYGB BMI.
Although RYGB is a theoretically reversible procedure, normal anatomy is re-established only in selected cases which are refractory to medical therapy and often also to revisional bariatric surgery. RYGB reversals entail high morbidity, while the extent of recurrent weight gain at 1-year post-reversal seems to allow patients to remain below the threshold of severe obesity.
Keywords
Humans, Gastric Bypass/methods, Gastric Bypass/adverse effects, Female, Middle Aged, Male, Retrospective Studies, Adult, Obesity, Morbid/surgery, Reoperation/statistics & numerical data, Treatment Outcome, Weight Loss, Postoperative Complications/epidemiology, Dumping Syndrome/etiology, Europe/epidemiology, United States/epidemiology, Abdominal Pain/etiology, Body Mass Index, Malabsorption Syndromes/surgery, Malabsorption Syndromes/etiology, Abdominal pain, Complications, Conversion to normal anatomy, Indications, Malnutrition, Outcomes, Recurrent weight gain, Reversal, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass, Secondary bariatric surgery
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
27/01/2025 11:33
Last modification date
22/02/2025 7:06