| 03 Mai 2013
In  2001 the LAP-BAND® adjustable gastric banding system (LAGB) was  approved by the FDA as weight loss procedure for patients with a body  mass  index (BMI) of 40 kg/m2 or higher and for patients with a BMI of at  least 35 with an obesity-related condition, such as diabetes or  hypertension. (A person  with a BMI of 30 or higher is considered obese.) During the procedure, a  surgeon makes small incisions in the patient’s abdomen and places an  adjustable band  around the upper part of the stomach. The newly created upper pouch  allows the patient to eat only small amounts of food at a time, and it  provides prolonged  appetite suppression. To  assess the safety and effectiveness of LAGB in an expanded group of  patients, Robert Michaelson, MD, PhD, FACS, of Northwest Weight Loss  Surgery in Everett, Washington, and his colleagues recruited 149  individuals with a BMI of 35 to 39.9 without an additional condition, or  a BMI of 30 to 34.9  with at least one obesity-related condition. “Patients  in our study had been obese for an average of 17 years,” said Dr.  Michaelson. “They tried numerous other weight loss methods and  finally reached out for surgical treatment when they were weary of the  repetitive failures at maintaining weight loss.” One  year after undergoing the procedure, 84.6% of patients achieved at  least a 30 percent loss in excess body weight, with an average excess  weight loss of 65 percent. A total of 66.4 percent of patients were no  longer obese. Obesity-related conditions that were present at the time  of surgery  improved for many patients, including 64.4 percent of patients who had  high cholesterol, 59.6 percent of patients who had hypertension, and  85.7 percent of  patients who had diabetes. Patients’ quality of life also improved. Most  side effects were mild to moderate and resolved within one month. The  researchers also found that the one year results were maintained or  improved at two years, and that each additional 10 percent weight  loss at year two was linked with a decrease in triglycerides by  13.7mg/dL, blood sugar levels by 3.5mg/dL, and systolic blood pressure  by 3.3mmHg. “The  results of this study convinced the FDA that early intervention in the  continuum of obesity is the right thing to do: treat before  people go on to develop serious comorbid conditions of obesity,” said  Dr. Michaelson. He added that this and similar studies prompted the  American Society  for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery to issue a position statement  endorsing weight loss surgery for patients with moderate obesity who  have failed non-  surgical methods of weight loss. “The next step is to get the private  insurers and Medicare, who continue to rely on guidelines established in  1991, to  review the incontrovertible literature, take down the barriers to the  necessary treatment for this disease, and offer the hope of a cure to 27  million  Americans,” said Dr. Michaelson. However,  in an accompanying editorial, David Arterburn, MD, MPH, of the Group  Health Research Institute in Seattle, and Melinda Maggard, MD,  MSH, of the University of California Los Angeles, cautioned that the  long-term benefits and risks of LAGB in lower weight individuals still  need to be  determined, and that studies in higher weight individuals show weight  regain starting at two years. “There are also concerns that serious  adverse events are  common; including reports of removal rates as high as 50 percent. As the  prevalence of severe comorbidities is less in this patient population,  the benefits  of preventing comorbidities is not known, which will require larger  sample sizes to determine,” they wrote. “Until longer-term data on the  benefits and harms  are available, the use of LAGB in patients with BMI of 30 to 35 kg/m2  should be primarily reserved for clinical research studies.” 
The  LAP-BAND® weight loss procedure is safe and effective in an expanded  group of patients, not just in people who are morbidly obese. This  conclusion is reported in a new study published in the scientific  journal Obesity. The findings indicate that the procedure may help to intervene before obesity becomes life threatening to patients.









