Abstract

PurposeBased on recent scientific evidence, bariatric surgery is more effective in the management of morbid obesity and related comorbidities than conservative therapy. Pylorus preserving surgical procedures (PPBS) such as laparoscopic single-anastomosis duodeno-jejunal or duodeno-ileal bypass with sleeve gastrectomy are modified duodenal switch (DS) surgical techniques. The duodeno-jejunal bypass liner (DJBL) is a novel surgical method in the inventory of metabolism focused manual interventions that excludes duodeno-jejunal mucosa from digestion, mimicking DS procedures without the risk of surgical intervention. The aim of this article is to summarize and compare differences between safety-related features and weight loss outcomes of DJBL and PPBS.MethodsA literature search was conducted in the PubMed database. Records of DJBL-related adverse events (AEs), occurrence of PPBS-related complications and reintervention rates were collected. Mean weight, mean body mass index (BMI), percent of excess of weight loss (EWL%), percent of total weight loss (TWL%) and BMI value alterations were recorded for weight loss outcomes.ResultsA total of 11 publications on DJBL and 6 publications on PPBS were included, involving 800 and 1462 patients, respectively. The baseline characteristics of the patients were matched. Comparison of DJBL-related AEs and PPBS-related severe complications showed an almost equal risk (risk difference (RD): −0.03 and confidence interval (CI): −0.27 to 0.21), despite higher rates among patients having received endoscopic treatment. Overall AE and complication rates classified by Clavien-Dindo showed that PPBS was superior to DJBL due to an excess risk level of 25% (RD: 0.25, CI: 0.01–0.49). Reintervention rates were more favourable in the PPBS group, without significant differences in risk (RD: −0.03, CI: −0.27 to 0.20). However, PPBS seemed more efficient regarding weight loss outcomes at 1-year follow-up according to raw data, while meta-analysis did not reveal any significant difference (odds ratio (OR): 1.08, CI: 0.74–1.59 for BMI changes).ConclusionOnly limited conclusions can be made based on our findings. PPBS was superior to DJBL with regard to safety outcomes (GRADE IIB), which failed to support the authors’ hypothesis. Surgical procedures showed lower complication rates than the incidence of DJBL-related AEs, although it should be emphasized that the low number of PPBS-related mild to moderate complications reported could be the result of incomplete data recording from the analysed publications. Weight loss outcomes favoured bariatric surgery (GRADE IIB). As the DJBL is implanted into the upper gastrointestinal tract for 6 to 12 months, it seems a promising additional method in the inventory of metabolic interventions.

Highlights

  • Rationale Obesity represents a high risk for metabolic syndrome-related morbidities, such as hypertension, dyslipidaemia, prediabetes and type II diabetes mellitus, resulting in various forms of cardiovascular disease [1, 2]

  • Overall Adverse event (AE) and complication rates classified by Clavien-Dindo showed that PPBS was superior to duodeno-jejunal bypass liner (DJBL) due to an excess risk level of 25% (RD: 0.25, confidence interval (CI): 0.01–0.49)

  • PPBS seemed more efficient regarding weight loss outcomes at 1-year follow-up according to raw data, while meta-analysis did not reveal any significant difference (odds ratio (OR): 1.08, CI: 0.74–1.59 for body mass index (BMI) changes)

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Summary

Introduction

Rationale Obesity represents a high risk for metabolic syndrome-related morbidities, such as hypertension, dyslipidaemia, prediabetes (hyperinsulinemia, impaired fasting glucose) and type II diabetes mellitus, resulting in various forms of cardiovascular disease [1, 2]. There is significant difference regarding complications and weight loss outcomes, depending on the type of surgical method [3–6]. Pylorus preserving surgical procedures (PPBS) date back to the early 1990s and have advantages over gastric bypass procedures (laparoscopic Roux-en-Y gastric bypass and oneanastomosis gastric bypass, LRYGB and OAGB, respectively) due to the preservation of the pylorus by a tube-like stomach (gastric sleeve), resulting in controlled gastric emptying and prevention of afferent limb bile reflux. The singleanastomosis duodeno-jejunal and duodeno-ileal bypass with sleeve gastrectomy (SADI-SG and SADJ-SG, respectively) are the most frequently applied methods of PPBS. These procedures are variants of the duodenal switch (DS) technique, representing favourable efficacy with acceptable complication rates, and vary in applicable technique. When using SADISG, a part of the ileum (200–300 cm measured backwards from the ileocecal valve) is connected to the duodenal stump after performing laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG)

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