The findings reinforce a need for thorough pre-surgery mental health
assessments of bariatric patients, as well as for providing them
with information about the risk of self-harm associated with the
procedure and long term follow-up, the study team writes in The
Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology.
The researchers examined data from two patient registries of obese
individuals who either got bariatric surgery or tried other types of
treatment or intensive lifestyle changes to lose weight. In one
registry, surgical patients were roughly three times more likely to
commit suicide or try to harm themselves than people who used other
weight loss approaches, while the risk was 78 percent higher with
surgery in the other registry.
The absolute risk of suicide was less than 1 percent for both
surgical and non-surgical patients in both registries. And the risk
of non-fatal self-harm was also low, ranging from less than 1
percent to almost 4 percent.
“We believe that the benefits of bariatric surgery, including lower
mortality, outweigh our finding of an increased risk of suicide and
self-harm,” lead study author Martin Neovius, a researcher at the
Karolinska Institute in Stockholm said by email.
Globally, 1.9 billion adults are overweight or obese, according to
the World Health Organization. Obesity increases the risk of heart
disease, diabetes, joint disorders and certain cancers.
Previous research has found obese people often struggle to shed
excess pounds or keep weight off when they do lose it. Lifestyle
changes such as following a healthy diet and getting regular
exercise can often help in the short-term but fail to produce
lasting results, particularly among people who have more than 100
pounds to lose before reaching a healthy weight.
In the current study, one registry included 2,101 obese patients who
underwent bariatric surgery and a control group of 2,037 obese
people who received only usual care, such as education on healthy
eating and exercise habits.
In this registry, half of the patients were followed for at least 18
years. During follow-up, 87 people who had surgery died by suicide
or tried to harm themselves, compared with 49 individuals who didn’t
get bariatric procedures.
A second registry in the study included 20,256 obese patients who
had bariatric surgery and a control group of 16,162 people who were
treated with intensive lifestyle modifications.
The second registry followed half of the patients for almost four
years or more. During follow-up, 341 people who had surgery and 84
people who didn’t died by suicide or tried to harm themselves.
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Patients were more likely to kill or harm themselves if they misused
drugs or alcohol, researchers found. But in the first registry,
surgery patients were also more likely to have a history of
self-harm than people who didn’t receive surgery.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how bariatric surgery might directly impact the odds that
patients attempt suicide or try to harm themselves.
Another limitation of the study is that none of the patients in the
registries had a newer and increasingly more common type of
bariatric surgery known as a sleeve gastrectomy, which is less
invasive, the authors note. This makes it possible that the results
might not reflect what would happen with people getting surgery
today.
Even so, the findings suggest that patients should be followed for
several years after surgery to monitor for any potential mental
health issues, said Matthew Spittal, co-author of an accompanying
editorial and a researcher at the University of Melbourne in
Australia.
While the study didn’t explore why surgery might lead to an
increased risk of suicide, it’s possible that some people might have
dissatisfaction with their amount of weight loss or the appearance
of loose flaps of skin that accompany dramatic weight loss, Spittal
said by email.
It’s also possible that the surgical weight loss might lead to
changes in the way the body absorbs nutrients and medications that
might in turn make people more likely to contemplate suicide or
self-harm, Spittal added.
But the benefits of surgery still outweigh this risk.
“The take-home message from this research is that bariatric surgery
remains the most effective way of treating severe obesity,” Spittal
said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2Er2jWw and http://bit.ly/2nk7OPJ The Lancet
Diabetes & Endocrinology, online January 9, 2018.
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