Monday, October 19, 2009

http://sites.google.com/a/clos.net/mini/increased-need-for-hospitalization-after-rny-gastric-bypass
Increased Need for Hospitalization after RNY Gastric Bypass

Unbiased Study shows RNY Gastric Bypass Increases Need for Hospitalization after gastric bypass surgery Primarily because of Complications
The rate of hospitalization in the year AFTER RNY was more than double the rate in the year preceding RNY (19% vs 8%, P<.001).

JAMA. 2005 Oct 19;294(15):1918-24.Click here to read Links

Comment in:
JAMA. 2005 Oct 19;294(15):1960-3.
JAMA. 2006 May 24;295(20):2355-6; author reply 2356.

Hospitalization before and after gastric bypass surgery.
Zingmond DS, McGory ML, Ko CY.

Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, Department of Medicine, The David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles 90095-1736, USA. dzingmond@mednet.ucla.edu

CONTEXT:

The use of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) has been reported to be effective in the treatment of obesity and its related comorbidities.

Need for Hospitalization after RYGB is less well understood.

OBJECTIVE:

To determine the rates and indications for inpatient hospital use before and after RYGB.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Retrospective study of Californians receiving RYGB in California hospitals from 1995 to 2004.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Hospitalization in the 1 to 3 years after RYGB.

RESULTS: In California from 1995 to 2004, 60,077 patients underwent RYGB-11,659 in 2004 alone.

The rate of hospitalization in the year following RYGB was more than double the rate in the year preceding RYGB (19.3% vs 7.9%, P<.001).

Furthermore, in the subset of patients (n = 24,678) with full 3-year follow-up,

a mean of 8.4% were admitted a year before RYGB

while 20.2% were readmitted in the year after RYGB,

18.4% in the second year after RYGB, and

14.9% in the third year after RYGB.

** The most common reasons for admission prior to RYGB were obesity-related problems (eg, osteoarthritis, lower extremity cellulitis), and elective operation (eg, hysterectomy),

** while the most common reasons for admission after RYGB were complications procedure related,

such as ventral hernia repair and gastric revision.

In multivariate logistic regression models predicting 1-year readmission after RYGB, increasing Charlson Comorbidity Index score, and hospitalization in the 3-year period prior to RYGB were significantly associated with readmission within a year.

CONCLUSIONS: Increases in hospital use after surgery appear to be related to RYGB. Payers, clinicians, and patients must consider the not-inconsequential rate of rehospitalization after this type of surgery.

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