Bariatric Surgery Clinical Trial
Official title:
Laparoscopic Single Anastomosis Sleeve Ileal (SASI) Bypass Versus Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy For Morbidly Obese Patients
Evaluation of the advantages, disadvantages and complications of a recently innovated procedure (Single anastomosis sleeve ileal "SASI" bypass) of the more traditional laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy "LSG"
Obesity is a major health problem affecting over 1.7 billion people. Obesity is defined as
excess body weight due to abnormal or excessive fat accumulation that presents a risk to
health. A crude popular measure of obesity is the body mass index (BMI), a person's weight
(in kilograms) divided by the square of his or her height (in meters). A person with a BMI of
30 or more is generally considered obese. A person with a BMI equal to or more than 25 is
considered overweight.
Obesity is a major risk factor for a number of chronic diseases, including diabetes mellitus,
cardiovascular diseases and cancer. It is associated with significant co-morbid conditions
and reduced life expectancy. Since 1997, obesity has been officially recognized by the World
Health Organization as a global epidemic.
Bariatric surgery has been shown to be the most successful approach in managing morbid
obesity that can achieve and sustain great weight loss for a long period.
Common strategies of bariatric surgery are: mechanical obstacles to food ingestion,
nutrient-excluded segments and malabsorption, which are a potential cause for complications
and should better be avoided from a strictly physiological prospect. Also, such procedures
necessitate lifelong medical supervision with the supplementation of vitamins and nutrients.
Moreover, they are frequently associated with dysphagia and vomiting as a result of
anatomical restrictions.
Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) was initially established as the first stage of a two
stage bariatric approach. It is now used as a primary bariatric procedure because of
documented excellent weight loss and an acceptable risk of complication. Advantages include
the avoidance of implantable material, maintenance of gastrointestinal continuity, avoidance
of malabsorption, and convertibility to other operations. However, The major disadvantage of
LSG is the severity of the major postoperative complications like bleeding and staple-line
leakage. Staple-line disruption is the most life-threatening complication after LSG, Leaks
after sleeve gastrectomy (SG) mostly occur because of the creation of a high internal
pressure pouch.
Our understanding of digestive physiology is now changing and the interacting neuroendocrine
signals that control hunger, satiety, and energy expenditure are better understood now. The
role of GI tract in satiety is a sum of a mechanical sensation of a full stomach, rapidly
confirmed by neuroendocrine signals that recognize whether the ingested was indeed nutritive.
In terms of meal termination, the most important of these postprandial neuroendocrine signals
are an elevation of satiety gut hormones in the blood, such as Glucagon-Like peptide 1
(GLP-1) and Peptide Tyrosine Tyrosine (PYY) and a reduction of ghrelin, an orexigenic hormone
mainly produced by neuroendocrine cells mostly located in the gastric fundus. Recent
physiological knowledge allows the design of bariatric procedures that aim at neuroendocrine
changes instead of mechanical restriction and malabsorption.
"Santoro" have recently reported his long-term data regarding sleeve gastrectomy with transit
bipartition (SG þ TB), which is a similar operation to duodenal switch (DS) but without
complete exclusion of duodenum in order to minimize nutritional complications. The goal of
this operation was to benefit the patients by counterbalancing the harmful effects of the
modern diet. Without exclusions and with a simple surgical procedure, SG þ TB amplifies the
nutritive stimulation of the distal gut whereas simultaneously diminishing the exposure of
the proximal bowel to nutrients without completely deactivating duodenum and jejunum.
A Modification of Santoro's operation was first reported as a case report by Mui in 2013,
then as a Case series on 68 patients by Greco and Tacchino in 2014 by performing a loop
rather than Roux-en-Y bipartition reconstruction, which came to be known as (Single
Anastomosis Sleeve Ileal "SASI") bypass.
That procedure has the advantage of maintaining the natural pathway through the duodenum
where a small percentage of food passes, and is associated with minimal post-operative
nutritional complications, and allows for full visualization of the biliary system during
endoscopy. Moreover, it's suggested that the incidence of leakage and gastroesophageal reflux
after sleeve gastrectomy is significantly reduced by the gastroileal bypass due to the
decrease in stomach pouch pressure.
This study aims to evaluate SASI bypass as a mode of functional restrictive therapeutic
option for morbidly obese patients, versus LSG.
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