Duodenal switch not necessarily better than RYGB for patients with high BMI

17 Jun 2024
Duodenal switch not necessarily better than RYGB for patients with high BMI

In the treatment of patients with a BMI of 50–60 kg/m2, duodenal switch (DS) appears to result in better weight loss outcomes but also more frequent adverse events, including nutritional complications, as compared with Roux-en-Y-gastric bypass (RYGB), according to an open-label study.

Sixty patients with a BMI of 50–60 kg/m2 were randomly assigned to undergo either DS or RYGB, performed laparoscopically. Of these patients, 48 (80 percent, mean age 48.0 years, 73 percent female) attended follow-up consultations, including 23 in the RYGB group and 25 in the DS group, and were included in the analysis.

After a median follow-up of 12 years, the primary outcome of BMI reduction was significantly greater in the DS group than in the RYGB group (20.3 vs 11.0 kg/m2; p<0.001).

Results for other secondary outcomes also favoured DS. These included total weight loss (33.9 percent vs 20.0 percent; p=0.001), systolic BP (–8 vs 2 mm Hg; p=0.02), HbA1c (–14 vs –4 mmol/mol; p=0.006), and total cholesterol (–46 vs –4 mg/dL; p<0.001), among others.

Bone mass decreased in both groups, with lower bone mass in the DS group at 10 years. Quality-of-life scores, assessed using the Obesity-Related Problem Scale and the 36-Item Short Form Health Survey, were similar between groups at 10 years.

However, adverse events occurred more frequently with DS than with RYGB (135 vs 97; p=0.02). Significantly more patients in the DS group had vitamin deficiencies (21 vs 11; p=0.008), including 25-hydroxyvitamin D deficiency (19 vs 9; p=0.005). Severe protein-caloric malnutrition occurred in four patients in the DS group, of whom three underwent revisional surgery.

JAMA Netw Open 2024;7:e2414340