Frontiers in Endocrinology (Nov 2022)

A multi-center study on glucometabolic response to bariatric surgery for different subtypes of obesity

  • Yao Liu,
  • Chunjun Sheng,
  • Wenhuan Feng,
  • Fang Sun,
  • Jingjing Zhang,
  • Jingjing Zhang,
  • Ying Chen,
  • Lili Su,
  • Jia Liu,
  • Lei Du,
  • Xuyang Jia,
  • Hui You,
  • Xiu Huang,
  • Shandong Wu,
  • Shandong Wu,
  • Shandong Wu,
  • Ziwei Lin,
  • Shen Qu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2022.989202
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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ObjectivesTo assess the benefit of a bariatric surgery in four artificial intelligence-identified metabolic (AIM) subtypes of obesity with respect to the improvement of glucometabolism and the remission of diabetes and hyperinsulinemia.MethodsThis multicenter retrospective study prospectively collected data from five hospitals in China from 2010 to 2021. At baseline 1008 patients who underwent a bariatric surgery were enrolled (median age 31 years; median BMI 38.1kg/m2; 57.40% women) and grouped into the four AIM subtypes. Baseline and follow-up data (506 and 359 patients at 3- and 12-month post-surgery) were collected for longitudinal effect analysis.ResultsOut of the four AIM subgroups, hypometabolic obesity (LMO) group was characterized by decompensated insulin secretion and high incidence of diabetes (99.2%) pre-surgery. After surgery, 62.1% of LMO patients with diabetes achieved remission, lower than the other three subgroups. Still, the bariatric surgery significantly reduced their blood glucose (median HbA1c decreased by 27.2%). The hypermetabolic obesity-hyperinsulinemia (HMO-I) group was characterized by severe insulin resistance and high incidence of hyperinsulinemia (87.8%) pre-surgery, which had been greatly alleviated post-surgery. For both metabolic healthy obesity (MHO) and hypermetabolic obesity-hyperuricemia (HMO-U) groups who showed a relatively healthy glucometabolism pre-surgery, rate of glucometabolic comorbidities improved moderately post-surgery.ConclusionIn terms of glucometabolism, the four AIM subtypes of patients benefited differently from a bariatric surgery, which significantly relieved hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia for the LMO and HMO-I patients, respectively. The AIM-based subtypes may help better inform clinical decisions on bariatric surgery and patient counseling pertaining to post-surgery outcomes.

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