Abstract

Background: Bariatric surgery (BS) has been shown to be beneficial in improving co-morbid conditions in morbidly obese patients. Long-term cardiovascular complications remain undefined and warrant further investigation. We examined the prevalence and risk of atrial fibrillation (AF) in obese patients who underwent BS. Methods: PUBMED/Medline, SCOPUS, EMBASE databases were systematically reviewed using relevant keywords to search prospective and retrospective studies reporting AF with long-term (at least >1-year follow-up) follow-up in patients who had undergone BS. Random effects models were used for meta-analysis and subgroup analysis. I 2 statistics was used to identify substantial (>75%) heterogeneity. Results: Nine studies (3 USA, 2 UK, 4 Sweden) including 24,164 patients who had undergone BS (mean BMI cut off: 35, mean age 42 years) with 29,330 controls were included in the analysis with a median follow-up of 8 years. Pooled prevalence of AF was lower in BS arm (3.0%, 95%CI: 1.4%-5%) as compared to non-BS arm (3.8%, 95% CI: 1.8%-5.0%). The Forest Plot (Fig. 1) depicts significantly reduced odds of having AF in patients who have undergone BS vs controls (OR: 0.74, 95%CI: 0.60-0.91, I 2 =70.2%, p<0.01). Sensitivity analysis using the leave-one-out method did confirm equivalent results. On subgroup analysis, AF prevalence in the BS group was slightly higher in studies with a mean age of ≥50 years (4.8%, 0-12%) as compared to cohorts with mean age <50 (2.0%, 1.4-5.0%). The pooled rate of AF was low on short-term follow-up compared to long-term follow-up after BS: 1.5% (0.9-2.5%) in 1-5 years, 1.9% (0.2-4.5%) in 6-10 years, 5.4% (0-13.9%) ≥10 years of BS. Conclusions: Obese patients undergoing BS had nearly 25% lower risk and lower pooled rate of AF when compared to controls over 8 years of follow-up. The protective effect of BS on reduced risk of AF was seen to gradually wane over longer follow-up which warrants continued efforts to effectively control CVD risk factors.

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