Based on thousands of patients in Denmark, researchers found that
three years after gastric bypass surgery, patients’ prescription
drug use in general decreased, including blood sugar and cholesterol
control drugs. But use of antidepressants and neuropathy drugs more
than doubled.
It isn’t clear why neuropsychiatric drug use rises after weight-loss
surgery, but the reasons should be explored, the study team writes
in Annals of Surgery.
“It is well-known that weight loss induced by gastric bypass may
improve e.g. type 2 diabetes and other metabolic diseases,” lead
author Dr. Sigrid Bjerge Gribsholt of Aarhus University Hospital
told Reuters Health by email.
“But it is surprising that this improvement in metabolic diseases
resulted in so pronounced reduction in medication for these diseases
- such as more than 70 percent reduced use of drugs used for
treatment of diabetes, 40 percent reduction for antihypertensive
drugs, and 50 percent reduction for drugs against hyperlipidemia,”
Gribsholt said.
The researchers studied data from a group of more than 9,000
patients who underwent Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery in Denmark
between 2006 and 2010 and compared them to more than 99,000 similar
people in the general population who did not have the surgery. Based
on medical records, the researchers compared prescription drug use
six months before surgery and three years after the procedure.
Most surgery patients were women and an average of 40 years old when
the study began. About 80 percent of those getting gastric bypass
were taking a prescription drug at the beginning of the study period
compared to 50 percent of those not getting the surgery.
Three years later, gastric bypass patients were using fewer
prescriptions while those in the comparison group were using more.
In the bypass group, use of blood sugar-lowering drugs, cholesterol
drugs, blood pressure drugs and inhalers for obstructed airways all
decreased substantially.
But even before undergoing surgery, use of neuropsychiatric drugs
like antidepressants and antipsychotics was twice as high in the
gastric bypass group relative to the others, and rose further after
surgery.
“This indicates that bariatric surgery may not on the average have
beneficial effect on psychological issues or psychiatric
conditions,” Gribsholt said.
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Diabetes, high blood pressure and unhealthy cholesterol are closely
related to profound obesity and are therefore cured in many patients
after surgery, she said.
“Right now there is no other procedure, drug, regimen, anything,
that seems to be effective for allowing people who have already
gained weight to lose it and keep it off,” said Pierre Cremieux,
Managing Principal of Analysis Group, Inc., an economic, financial,
and strategy consulting firm in Boston, who was not part of the new
study.
“The picture is pretty dire, and so far at least bariatric surgery
seems to be the only intervention that works but of course, it is a
fairly radical and irreversible decision for a patient,” Cremieux
told Reuters Health.
The new study involved many patients over the long term and yielded
reliable results, but the situation in Denmark may not be applicable
to other countries, he said. Previous studies had found that
antidepressant and antipsychotic use stayed steady after bariatric
surgery, while use of other drugs decreased.
“There may be less psychiatric treatment in Denmark,” he said. When
patients interact with the healthcare system for bariatric surgery,
they may also be referred for mental health treatment that they
weren’t receiving before.
Drug use may reflect changes in underlying diseases and patients are
generally informed that the use of drugs to treat diabetes often can
be reduced immediately after the operation, Gribsholt said. “On the
other hand, obesity surgery is not a cure for everything - for
example, psychological problems or pain may still be present - or
even arise - after surgery, necessitating medical treatment,” she
said.
“In the U.S. there have been real efforts particularly at centers
for excellence to make sure that there is a very careful mental
health dimension to bariatric surgery processes,” Cremieux said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1U2ldEO Annals of Surgery, online April 2,
2016.
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