Morbid Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Longitudinal, Open-label Study on the Short-term Effects of Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass Surgery vs. Gastric Banding on Glucose Homeostasis in Obese Subjects
The purpose of this study is to quantify the relative contribution of improved insulin sensitivity and improved insulin secretion to the glycaemic effect of bariatric surgery.
In 1987 Pories et al. (1) published that after gastric bypass 99% of morbidly obese patients
became and remained euglycaemic over time. However, the most interesting observation of
these authors (1) was that the patients were converted to euglycaemia within 10 days of the
operation, even if before they required large doses of insulin. Thereafter, we ourselves
(2-6) as well as other Authors (7,8) have found that both mainly malabsorptive bariatric and
mainly restrictive surgery are effective in producing early improvement/resolution of type 2
diabetes, also in normal weight (9) or overweight-obese subjects (10).
Until now the mechanisms through which bariatric surgery operate in improving insulin
sensitivity and, consequently, diabetes control have not been elucidated. To complicate the
picture there is the fact that after bariatric surgery patients are not allowed to eat for a
time that is longer as the entity of the abdominal trauma increases. In fact, after
laparoscopic bariatric surgery the patients are re-alimented in the 3rd post-operative day
while after open surgery the time length before re-alimentation is about 7 days. Although in
most centres the patients receive a parenteral nutrition covering the energy needs while
they remain at rest, in some other centres they are only re-hydrated. Thus, it might be
hypothesised that fasting can contribute to the improvement of glucose disposal. The data in
the literature counteract this possibility as many Authors (11-15) have demonstrated that a
very-low calorie diet (VLCD) is essentially unable to improve insulin sensitivity at least
in the short run, when the weight loss is minimal. In this regard, Jazet et al. (11) found
that the glucose control amelioration in diabetic subjects undergoing a 2-day VLCD was a
reduction in the hepatic glucose production rather than an improvement in the whole-body
glucose disposal. Similarly, Christiansen et al (12) observed the increase in the glucose
metabolic clearance rate (MCR) was not apparent before day 20 of energy restriction, when
the weight loss became significant. In another study, diabetic patients under a 4-day
energy-restricted diet (providing 4620 ± 1050 kJ/d) had a deterioration of both basal
glucose MCR and insulin-stimulated glucose disposal (13).
Recently, Laferrère et al (16) compared the late (1 month) effect of an equivalent weight
loss by RYGB or by diet in two groups of matched morbidly obese patients with type 2
diabetes mellitus. The glucose area under-the-curve (AUC) after an oral glucose tolerance
test (OGTT) and glucose levels at 120' were significantly lower after RYGB compared with
diet (P = 0.014 and P = 0.001, respectively).
Another important aspect of the weight loss is the modulation of lipolysis. Many studies
have shown that obese subjects are insulin resistant at the level of adipose tissue, ie,
despite high plasma insulin levels lipolysis and FFA release are not suppressed. It is
therefore interesting to study the changes in lipolysis before and after surgery and also
the ability of insulin (e.g., during the euglycemic, hyperinsulinemic clamp) to suppress
peripheral lipolysis. By infusing deuterated glycerol we will be able to estimate glycerol
rate of appearance, which is the best available index of lipolysis. In fact intracellular
triglyceride (TG) hydrolysis results in the release of one mole of glycerol and 3 moles of
FFA. While the FFA can be re-esterified intracellularly, and thus do not appear into the
systemic circulation, glycerol cannot be re-esterified since the adipocyte lacks glycerol
kinase. Thus, all glycerol derived from intracellular TG hydrolysis is released into the
circulation and can be traced by deuterated glycerol. We have used this technique previously
in diabetic subjects (17), in subjects with NASH as well as in obese subjects under VLCD
(18). In the latter study we have shown that VLCD improved adipose tissue IR.
As far as we know, no data are available in the literature comparing the effect of RYGB with
a purely restrictive bariatric procedure in order to take into account simultaneously the
effect of the surgical trauma and that of the reduced food intake in the early
post-operative period.
The main goal of this study is to determine the immediate effect of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass
surgery on glucose homeostasis, factoring out the confounding effects of the surgical
approach (incl. laparoscopy) and of the post-operative fasting.
To this purpose, patients of the two bariatric surgery groups (Roux-en-Y gastric bypass and
gastric banding) are matched as far as feasible. Primary parameter is insulin resistance (as
assessed by Matsuda index). Further the same BMI inclusion criteria apply for both groups
(BMI > 30 kg/m2 and < 55 kg/m2). While age, gender and BMI within the specified range are
also expected to influence the read-outs, no matching for these baseline characteristics is
foreseen due to feasibility issues.
Patients receive oral food typically from day 3 or 4 after laparoscopic bariatric surgery.
This post-operative food intake is restricted to 800 - 1000 kcal/day, usually divided in 6
small meals, with the following composition 55% carbohydrates, 30% lipids and 15% proteins;
saturated lipids ~ 10% . A similar caloric intake restriction will be imposed during the
1-week diet period prior to Visit 3, which will be done 10 +/- 2 weeks before the operation
in order to allow the patients a complete recovery of his/her body weight which must be kept
constant before the next study in order to avoid methodological biases.
;
Time Perspective: Prospective
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