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Study: Obesity surgery can cure diabetes
Associated Press ^ | January 22, 2008 | CARLA K. JOHNSON

Posted on 01/22/2008 2:25:32 PM PST by decimon

CHICAGO - A new study gives the strongest evidence yet that obesity surgery can cure diabetes. Patients who had surgery to reduce the size of their stomachs were five times more likely to see their diabetes disappear over the next two years than were patients who had standard diabetes care, according to Australian researchers.

Most of the surgery patients were able to stop taking diabetes drugs and achieve normal blood tests.

"It's the best therapy for diabetes that we have today, and it's very low risk," said the study's lead author, Dr. John Dixon of Monash University Medical School in Melbourne, Australia.

The patients had stomach band surgery, a procedure more common in Australia than in the United States, where gastric bypass surgery, or stomach stapling, predominates.

Gastric bypass is even more effective against diabetes, achieving remission in a matter of days or a month, said Dr. David Cummings, who wrote an accompanying editorial in the journal but was not involved in the study.

"We have traditionally considered diabetes to be a chronic, progressive disease," said Cummings of the University of Washington in Seattle. "But these operations really do represent a realistic hope for curing most patients."

Diabetes experts who read the study said surgery should be considered for some obese patients, but more research is needed to see how long results last and which patients benefit most. Surgery risks should be weighed against diabetes drug side effects and the long-term risks of diabetes itself, they said.

The diabetes benefits of weight-loss surgery were known, but the Australian study in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association is the first of its kind to compare diabetes in patients randomly assigned to surgery or standard care. Scientists consider randomized studies to yield the highest-quality evidence.

The study involved 55 patients, so experts will be looking for results of larger experiments under way.

"Few studies really qualify as being a landmark study. This one is," said Dr. Philip Schauer, who was not involved in the Australian research but leads a Cleveland Clinic study that is recruiting 150 obese people with diabetes to compare two types of surgery and standard medical care.

"This opens an entirely new way of thinking about diabetes."

Obesity is a major risk factor for diabetes, and researchers are furiously pursuing reasons for the link as rates for both climb. What's known is that excess fat can cause the body's normal response to insulin to go haywire. Researchers are investigating insulin-regulating hormones released by fat and the role of fatty acids in the blood.

In the Australian study, all the patients were obese and had been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes during the past two years. Their average age was 47. Half the patients underwent a type of surgery called laparoscopic gastric banding, where an adjustable silicone cuff is installed around the upper stomach, limiting how much a person can eat.

Both groups lost weight over two years; the surgery patients lost 46 pounds on average, while the standard-care patients lost an average of 3 pounds.

Blood tests showed diabetes remission in 22 of the 29 surgery patients after two years. In the standard-care group, only four of the 26 patients achieved that goal. The patients who lost the most weight were the most likely to eliminate their diabetes.

Both patient groups learned about low-fat, high-fiber diets and were encouraged to exercise. Both groups could meet with a health professional every six weeks for two years.

The death rate for stomach band surgery, which can cost $17,000 to $20,000, is about 1 in 1,000. There were only minor complications in the study. Stomach stapling has a 2 percent death rate and costs $20,000 to $30,000.

In the United States, surgeons perform more than 100,000 obesity surgeries each year.

The American Diabetes Association is interested in the findings. The group revises its recommendations each fall, taking new research into account.

"There is a growing body of evidence that bariatric surgery is an effective tool for managing diabetes," said Dr. John Buse of the University of North Carolina School of Medicine in Chapel Hill, the association's president for medicine and science.

"It's just a question of how effective is it, for what spectrum of patients, over what period of time and at what cost? Not all those questions have been answered yet."

Medical devices used in the study were provided by the manufacturers, but the companies had no say over the study's design or its findings, Dixon said.

___

On the Net:

JAMA: http://jama.ama-assn.org


TOPICS: Health/Medicine
KEYWORDS: diabetes; health; jama; surgery
Perhaps this will lead to a surgical procedure specific to diabetes.
1 posted on 01/22/2008 2:25:33 PM PST by decimon
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To: decimon
Both groups lost weight over two years; the surgery patients lost 46 pounds on average, while the standard-care patients lost an average of 3 pounds.

I think this is a significant fact.

2 posted on 01/22/2008 2:28:04 PM PST by Tax-chick ("Gently alluding to the indisputably obvious is not gloating." ~Richard John Neuhaus)
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To: decimon

The bariatric surgery that I had has a 98% cure rate for type 2 diabetes. It’s a duodenal switch. While I was not diabetic, in one year, I lost 130 lbs. and am healthier now than I have ever been. BP 113/65 and my last cholesteral test results had the Dr. drawing a smiley face next to the numbers when he sent them to me.


3 posted on 01/22/2008 2:31:04 PM PST by Clintons Are White Trash (Lynn Stewart, Helen Thomas, Rosie ODonnell, Maureen Dowd - The Axis of Ugly)
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To: Clintons Are White Trash

Congratulations! I bet your knees feel better, don’t they? If my weight goes over a certain point, it’s instant knee problems.


4 posted on 01/22/2008 2:42:45 PM PST by A_perfect_lady
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To: A_perfect_lady

Thanks, my knees weren’t a real problem but it seems everything else was! It’s the best thing I’ve ever done for myself and would do it again in a heartbeat.


5 posted on 01/22/2008 2:45:03 PM PST by Clintons Are White Trash (Lynn Stewart, Helen Thomas, Rosie ODonnell, Maureen Dowd - The Axis of Ugly)
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To: decimon

This is not new, it has been know for over ten years.


6 posted on 01/22/2008 2:53:28 PM PST by svcw (There is no plan B.)
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To: Clintons Are White Trash

Oh. I guess I just have bad knees, then. LOL!!


7 posted on 01/22/2008 4:57:27 PM PST by A_perfect_lady
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To: A_perfect_lady

That’s an easy fix: get yourself a metric scale ;)


8 posted on 01/22/2008 6:05:22 PM PST by Hegewisch Dupa
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To: decimon
... the surgery patients lost 46 pounds on average ...

Is that all for weight-loss surgery? From the "before" pictures I've seen, on many of those patients, 40-some pounds wouldn't even be a noticeable loss.

If that's all it takes - 40 lbs is for instance 15% of the body weight of someone who starts off at 300 lbs. Is it really that difficult to go from 300 lbs to 260? Especially for a guy?

Seems to me it's a bit premature to go ballyhooing surgery, if those relatively small amounts of weight are all you have to lose to put diabetes into remission.

9 posted on 01/25/2008 1:51:56 PM PST by valkyrieanne
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