Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Bariatric Surgery for Morbid Obesity: Clinical and Pathophysiologic Consequences
Despite progress in understanding the pathophysiology of obesity, current strategies for its
medical management remain largely ineffective. Most efforts have focused on reducing caloric
intake or increasing energy expenditure, either through behavior modification (e.g. dieting,
regular exercise) alone, or augmented by pharmacologic efforts to decrease appetite, inhibit
fat absorption, or alter metabolism. Bariatric surgery remains the only proven long term
treatment of morbid obesity.
Super morbidly obese (SMO: Body Mass Index (BMI) > 50) and super super morbidly obese (SSMO:
BMI > 60) patients lose considerable weight, but stabilize at Body Mass Indexes (BMIs) that
are still obese or even morbidly obese after risking considerable morbidity and/or
mortality. Among commonly performed bariatric surgeries, a laparoscopic two-stage procedure,
in which an initial restrictive procedure is followed after a weight loss of ~100 lbs by a
more complex procedure that creates malabsorption, is gaining interest. Initial studies have
demonstrated very good long-term weight loss with minimal morbidity, and no operative
mortality in these high risk patients.
Availability of biospecimens obtained at each stage of this protocol will allow
participating scientists a unique opportunity to test in human tissues hypotheses developed
in animals. Studies proposed under this application focus on fatty acids and overall fat
disposition in fat depots (adipose tissue) of your body, and the role of adipose tissue
hormones and inflammatory processes in obesity and its associated health related issues.
Despite rapidly growing interest in the pathogenesis of the obesity epidemic, the
pathophysiology of obesity remain poorly understood. While studies in animals have yielded
many insights, it has become clear that human obesity differs in important ways from that in
rodents. Bariatric surgery offers better outcomes, but in the highest grades of obesity
(BMI>50) remains a high risk undertaking with >5% operative mortality being reported when
commonly performed bariatric surgical approaches are employed. By contrast, laparoscopic
two-stage approach has resulted in excellent weight loss, minimal morbidity, and <1%
mortality.
Availability of blood samples and biopsies of omental and subcutaneous fat from each of the
paired bariatric procedures in this protocol will provide a unique opportunity to study key
issues in human obesity. This study tests the broad hypothesis that there are significant
and as yet unrecognized differences between the pathobiology of obesity in man and rodents,
the identification of which may lead to new therapeutic targets. Accordingly, to facilitate
comparisons with aspects of obesity we have already investigated in animal models, we will
1. seek fat depot specific differences in Long Chain Fatty Acid (LCFA) disposition,
macrophage infiltration and adipokine production in obesity and after surgery-induced weight
loss in man, and correlate them with the presence/severity of the metabolic syndrome
(MetSyn)Íž and 2., quantify the relative significance and response to weight loss of
different mechanisms contributing to hepatic steatosis and the elevated triglycerides (TG)
and reduced High-Density Lipoprotein (HDL) typical of obesity and MetSyn.
;
Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Prospective
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