Gallstone Disease After Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy in an Asian Population-What Proportion of Gallstones Actually Becomes Symptomatic?

Obes Surg

Division of General Surgery (Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery), University Surgical Cluster, National University Health System, 1E Kent Ridge Road, NUHS Tower Block, Singapore, 119228, Singapore.

Published: September 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored gallstone formation after laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) in a cohort of morbidly obese patients in Asia, highlighting the need for region-specific data on this complication.
  • Despite noting a 27.5% incidence of new gallstones one year post-op, there was only a 0.9% rate of complications requiring surgery, indicating that most patients remained asymptomatic during follow-up.
  • The findings align with Western data, suggesting that gallstone formation is common after LSG, but questions the necessity of routine surveillance and prophylactic treatments due to the low complication rates observed.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite evidence on gallstone disease after laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG), there is an existing lack of consensus on practice guidelines, i.e., surveillance and stone-lowering prophylaxis. Available evidence also has a racial bias as western reports predominate current data. Considering the growing popularity of LSG in Asia and the unique Asian anthropometrics, we have attempted to provide a regional perspective by reviewing our LSG database to investigate the epidemiology of this complication.

Methods: One hundred two morbidly obese cases were retrospectively reviewed. Abdominal ultrasounds were conducted preoperatively and at 12-month post-op. No gallstone-lowering prophylaxis was used. Outcome measure was the incidence of new gallstone formation at 1 year and the rate of symptomatic stones during the follow-up period.

Results: Mean age was 43 years (range 20-68) with average initial BMI of 41.68 kg/m. Preoperative gallstones were present in 14 (13.7%) cases. At 12-month post-op, 24 (27.5%) patients with no previous gallstone disease developed new stones. Within the mean follow-up period of 28.4 months, only one case (0.9%) developed gallstone complication requiring a cholecystectomy. We found no statistical difference in demographics, BMI variables (initial BMI, ΔBMI at 6 months and 1 year), and comorbidities between patients with new gallstone and those without stones.

Conclusion: Our results match western data in that gallstone formation is common after LSG though incidence of complicated stones is small. This is despite not using gallstone-lowering prophylaxis. The low conversion rate also questions the relevance of surveillance screening, as most patients with new gallstones remain asymptomatic at least in the short-term follow-up.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11695-017-2657-yDOI Listing

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