Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Gastric Bypass Procedure and AspireAssist Aspiration Therapy System for the Treatment of Morbid Obesity, Observational Study Over 5 Years
The purpose of this study is to compare Gastric Bypass and AspireAssist Aspiration Therapy over 5 years of treatment with regards to weight loss, quality of life, complications, adverse events, and health economics.
Overweight and obesity is increasing rapidly in Sweden and is the greatest threat to future
public health. Obesity, defined according to the World Health Organization (WHO) as a body
mass index (BMI) greater than 30 kg/m2, is an intractable disease in healthcare today.
Obesity results in reduced life expectancy and increased morbidity.
Weight reduction by lifestyle changes or with different pharmacological preparations have in
many studies not made lasting long term results. Obesity surgery has so far been the only way
to achieve permanent weight loss. During the 1980s, restrictive procedures were performed,
e.g., vertical banded gastro-plasty (VBG) with good but unfortunately transient effect. Later
developed, is the now prevalent gastric bypass procedure (GBP) which today uses the keyhole
technique and causes combined restrictive and mal-absorptive changes in gastrointestinal
anatomy.
GBP is currently the standard method in clinical practice for the surgical treatment of
morbid obesity (i.e., BMI over 35). GBP is a procedure that is not reversible, which entail
certain pre - and postoperative risks. GBP quickly brings a sharp reduction in weight and
also regression of diabetes mellitus type 2. Unfortunately, the surgery cause lifelong
mal-absorption and requirements of vitamin and mineral supplements.
Swedish Obese Subjects study (SOS) that emanated from Gothenburg was the first controlled
intervention study of overweight individuals. Approximately 4000 patients were included, half
of which were surgical, the other half were treated optimally, but without surgery. The
patients have been followed for 10-20 years. Total mortality was 24% lower in the surgical
group.
A new alternative approach to obesity surgery, AspireAssist™ Aspiration Therapy System (CE
Marked), comes from the United States and in this method the individual empties out digesta
from the stomach. Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) has been used internationally
since the early 1980s for nutrition therapy for stroke or cancer. In a gastroscopy a tube is
placed between the stomach and abdominal wall and nutrition administered via tube directly
into the stomach.
Aspiration treatment with AspireAssist™ empties food from the stomach after every meal to
lose weight. Using a valve mechanism and associated tubing set and water reservoir the
individual empties out digesta in the toilet 20 minutes after each meal and loses
approximately 30% of the caloric intake in the diet. A 1 -year study in Karlskrona, Sweden,
has shown a significant reduction in weight, almost 40% Excess Weight Loss (% EWL) reduction
and median weight reduction of 16.5 kg after 6 months. For GBP the weight reduction of 1 year
is in the order of 70-85 %. During 1 year of treatment with AspireAssist™ there were no
serious complications or problems with the body's electrolyte balance noted either at the
surgery or during follow-up. The advantage of this method is that it is completely reversible
and the individual who does not wish to continue aspiration may have the tube into the
stomach removed. GBP results in most of the stomach becoming disconnected and not accessible
for the diagnosis of, for example, ulcers, bleeding, tumors or gall stones. AspireAssist™
does not have any lasting changes in the anatomy and thus will not lead to the potential for
internal hernia that GBP unfortunately can cause. Wound infection occurs in approximately 9 %
of cases when PEG tubes are placed in patients with cancer or stroke. Wound infections are,
in most cases, treatable with antibiotics in tablet form and are very rarely considered to be
a serious complication. Antibiotics are routinely given in conjunction with PEG insertion.
Very unusual complication is leakage associated with insertion of the PEG and the method has
been reported to have a risk of about 2 % during PEG insertion.
For the individual to get help to change their habits and their lifestyle, cognitive
behavioral therapy (CBT) is included in the treatment concept for AspireAssist™. CBT program
runs for six months and includes both group meetings and individual conversations and
individual assignments between meetings. Group meetings will cover the following themes:
motivation, vision workshop, self-esteem, thought management, stress, learn to eat
consciously, prevent and manage relapse. The program uses no calorie reducing methods since
there is no scientific evidence that these provide permanent results but are based on CBT.
The program is enhanced with awareness and mental training, which are methods that have shown
good results in stress-related conditions. Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) in one
study has been shown to change brain activity of the participants so that the activity was
shifted from the areas in the frontal lobe that is active during stress, anxiety and
depression to areas that regulate peace, joy and curiosity.
Randomization in clinical trial (RCT) had been the best way to implement such a comparative
study. But AspireAssist™ method is aimed at patients who do not want or dare to be operated
with Gastric Bypass Procedure (GBP) and therefore fails to randomization.
We therefore recruit patients from the clinic's waiting list of accepted and planned the GBP
and the other group comes from the existing waiting list for Aspire method to treat obesity.
This group includes only those patients who expressed clearly that they are not willing or
dare to be operated with GBP, but instead wishes to receive treatment with Aspire method for
their morbid obesity.
There are now newer statistical methods to compare two or more groups in an observational
study in a good and statistically significant manner and Stata version 13 can handle it well
by matching the so-called covariates (e.g., in our study may be covariates following
variables at baseline: age, gender, preoperative weight, BMI, concomitant disease such as
diabetes). Patients were matched and then the comparison is done between the matched groups.
Calculation of treatment effects , including so-called propensity score exploitation has
already been used in a comparative study between GBP and other bariatric surgery for obesity
where neither has been able to randomize patients (Carlin et al Annals of Surgery, Vol. 257,
Number 5, May 2013: 791-7)
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