Houston Chronicle

Guidelines recommend obesity surgery as diabetes treatment

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WASHINGTON — New guidelines say weight-loss surgery should become a more routine treatment option for diabetes, even for some patients who are mildly obese.

Obesity and Type 2 diabetes are a deadly pair, and numerous studies show stomach-shrinking operations can dramatical­ly improve diabetes.

But Tuesday’s guidelines mark the first time the surgery is recommende­d specifical­ly as a diabetes treatment rather than as obesity treatment with a side benefit, and expand the eligible candidates.

The recommenda­tions were endorsed by the American Diabetes Associatio­n, the Internatio­nal Diabetes Federation and 43 other health groups, and published in the journal Diabetes Care.

“We do not claim that surgery should be the firstline therapy,” cautioned Dr. David E. Cummings, an endocrinol­ogist at the University of Washington and senior author of the guidelines. But as standard care often isn’t enough, “it’s time for something new.”

Here are some things to know:

Diabetes is a serious problem: About 26 million Americans have diabetes, mostly the Type 2 form where the body gradually loses the ability to produce or use insulin to turn food into energy. Many Type 2 diabetics, although not all, are overweight or obese.

Does obesity surgery really help? Studies have long shown that most obese diabetics who undergo bariatric surgery see their blood sugar control dramatical­ly improve. Some even reach normal levels despite quitting their regular medicine. The surgery is not considered a cure, because some people relapse. But others have remained in remission for years.

Who would qualify? It’s recommende­d for patients whose BMI, or body mass index , is at least 40, regardless of their overall blood sugar, and for patients with a BMI of at least 35 whose diabetes is inadequate­ly controlled despite lifestyle changes and medication.

Also, the guidelines say surgery can be considered with a BMI as low as 30 for patients with poor control despite usual care.

It’s not the pounds: While weight loss itself can help Type 2 diabetes, operations such as gastric bypass, the most common kind, and other types of bariatric surgery are thought to help in a different way — by affecting hormones, gut bacteria and other substances that affect how the body handles insulin and blood sugar. The guidelines take no position on which operation is best.

Is it safe? Bariatric surgery — called metabolic surgery when performed for diabetes — has become far less invasive in recent years. The risk of death or serious side effects from surgery is small and comparable to gallbladde­r operations or hysterecto­mies, said Dr. Francesco Rubino, chair of metabolic and bariatric surgery at King’s College London.

The cost: Such operations can cost $20,000 to $25,000. Insurance coverage has become more common but remains spotty, and many insurers limit coverage to severely obese patients..

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