Abstract

This study examined whether 355 obese patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) of varying duration and severity experienced equivalent weight loss and T2D remission following a newer sleeve gastrectomy (SG) procedure - SG with transit bipartition (SG-TB). Primary outcomes were changes in body mass index (BMI), total weight loss (TWL), excess BMI loss (EBMIL), A1C, and diabetes medication use through 24 months. Between December 2015 and December 2019, 399 patients who underwent SG-TB reached the 2-year time point. Follow-up was possible in 355 patients (89.0%): 206 females (58.0%), mean age 51.5 years (24.0-73.0), BMI 34.0 kg/m2 (28.0-50.5), and T2D duration 12.0 years (4.0-37.0). At 2 years, total sample respective mean TWL and EBMIL were 20.2 ± 6.1% (95% CI: 19.5, 20.8) and 87.7 ± 35.2% (84.1, 91.4) corresponding to mean BMI change of 7.0 ± 2.7 kg/m2 (6.7, 7.3) (p < 0.001). T2D duration and severity subgroups experienced comparable BMI and A1C change from baseline (p < 0.001); 281 (79.2%) maintained complete remission. ANOVA showed significant mean increases in vitamin D, calcium, and albumin: overall complication rate, 10.2%; no mortality. In 355 patients with obesity who underwent SG-TB, excellent weight loss, T2D, and nutritional outcomes were seen at 2-year follow-up regardless of preoperative T2D duration and severity.

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