Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of Weight Loss Induced by Bariatric Surgery vs Conventional Treatment on Body Composition, Adipokines, Gastro-intestinal Hormones and Cardiometabolic Risk Factors
Patients with overweight or obesity are in need to loose weight and represent a particularly challenging medical condition. Undoubtedly, any intervention achieving a negative energy balance over an extended time period will result in weight loss. Although several treatment modalities are available, currently the most extended approaches are lifestyle changes, pharmacotherapy, and bariatric surgery. Given the limited approved anti-obesity drugs, the main therapeutic strategies involve either conventional treatment or bariatric surgery. Conventional weight-reduction programs pursue a safe weight loss rate of 0,5-1,0 kg per week. The main modifiable factors affecting energy balance are dietary energy intake and energy expended through physical activity. In spite of the difficulty in achieving relevant and sustained weight loss via the conventional approach, some patients are successful in reducing weight and obesity-associated complications. Bariatric surgery has proved to be the most effective long-term treatment for weight loss and comorbidity improvement. While some of the surgery-induced benefits are directly dependent on adipose tissue reduction, others are due to specific gastrointestinal changes that take place early on and before any significant effects on body weight are observed. The present study contemplates the determination and comparison of the anthropometric and metabolic changes produced by the conventional and surgery-induced treatment modalities. Particular emphasis will be placed on the potential differential effects between conventional and surgical weight loss on body composition changes, circulating adipokines and gastrointestinal hormones together with their subsequent impact on cardiometabolic risk factors.
In spite of the recognition of obesity as a serious public health problem due to its
well-known increased risk for the development of type 2 diabetes hypertension, coronary
heart disease, sleep-breathing disorders, and certain forms of cancer, among others, it is
proving extraordinarily difficult to halt this pandemia. Strictly speaking obesity does not
refer to an excess weight or weight to height ratio. In fact, the World Health Organization
defines obesity as a state of increased adipose tissue of sufficient magnitude to produce
adverse health consequences. Thus, in order to better define the effects and benefits of
weight loss it is important to address the impact on body fat changes. Given the limited
approved anti-obesity drugs, the main therapeutic strategies involve either conventional
treatment or bariatric surgery. The main modifiable factors affecting energy balance are
dietary energy intake and energy expended through physical activity. In spite of the
difficulty in achieving relevant and sustained weight loss via the conventional approach,
some patients are successful in reducing weight and obesity-associated complications.
Bariatric surgery has proved to be the most effective long-term treatment for weight loss
and comorbidity improvement. While some of the surgery-induced benefits are directly
dependent on adipose tissue reduction, others are due to specific gastrointestinal changes
that take place early on and before any significant effects on body weight are observed.
Noteworthy, currently available bariatric procedures differ on their impact on these
aspects. The present study contemplates the determination and comparison of the
anthropometric and metabolic changes produced by the conventional and surgery-induced
treatment modalities. Particular emphasis will be placed on the potential differential
effects between conventional and surgical weight loss on energy intake, energy expenditure,
body composition changes, circulating adipokines and gastrointestinal hormones together with
their subsequent impact on cardiometabolic risk factors. The conventional weight-reduction
program (CONV) will pursue a safe weight loss rate of 0,5-1,0 kg per week. The
surgery-induced weight loss will be achieved by two of the most frequently used bariatric
operations, the sleeve gastrectomy [SG (which implies a restrictive component)] and the
Roux-en-Y gastric bypass [RYGB (which combines a restrictive and a malabsorptive
component)].
The purpose of the study is to determine the effect of three weight loss procedures that
differ on their manipulation of the anatomical and functional characteristics of the
gastrointestinal tract. While in the conventional treatment the gastrointestinal system
remains intact, in the SG only the stomach is manipulated as opposed to the RYGB, where both
the stomach and the small intestine are operated on. Since bariatric surgery is well known
to induce partial or total remission of type 2 diabetes mellitus, the effects of the three
different weight loss procedures will be assessed separately in obese normoglycemic and
obese type 2 diabetic individuals.
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Allocation: Non-Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Basic Science
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