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ORLANDO – Bariatric surgery in obese patients with heart failure was associated with a marked decrease in the subsequent rate of ED visits and hospitalizations for heart failure in a large, real-world, case-control study presented at the American Heart Association scientific sessions.
“This decline in the rate of heart failure morbidity was rapid in onset and sustained for at least 2 years after bariatric surgery,” according to Dr. Yuichi J. Shimada of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.
In a separate study, however, he found that bariatric surgery for obesity in patients with atrial fibrillation didn’t produce a reduction in ED visits and hospitalizations for the arrhythmia.
The heart failure study was a case-control study of 1,664 consecutive obese patients with heart failure who underwent a single bariatric surgical procedure in California, Florida, or Nebraska. Their median age was 49 years. Women accounted for 70% of the participants. Drawing upon federal Healthcare Cost and Utility Project databases on ED visits and hospital admissions in those three states, Dr. Shimada and coinvestigators compared the group’s rates of ED visits and hospitalizations for heart failure for 2 years before and 2 years after bariatric surgery. Thus, the subjects served as their own controls.
During the reference period, which lasted from months 13-24 presurgery, the group’s combined rate of ED visits and hospital admission for heart failure exacerbation was 14.4%. The rate wasn’t significantly different during the 12 months immediately prior to surgery, at 13.3%.
The rate dropped to 8.7% during the first 12 months after bariatric surgery and remained rock solid at 8.7% during months 13-24 postsurgery. In a logistic regression analysis, this translated to a 44% reduction in the risk of ED visits or hospital admission for heart failure during the first 2 years following bariatric surgery.
These findings are consistent with previous work by other investigators showing a link between obesity and heart failure exacerbations. The new data advance the field by providing the best evidence to date of the effectiveness of substantial weight loss on heart failure morbidity, Dr. Shimada observed.
Nonbariatric surgeries such as hysterectomy or cholecysectomy in the study population had no effect on the rate of heart failure exacerbations.
Dr. Shimada’s atrial fibrillation study was structured in the same way. It included 1,056 patients with atrial fibrillation who underwent bariatric surgery for obesity in the same three states. The rate of ED visits or hospitalization for heart failure was 12.1% in months 13-24 prior to bariatric surgery, 12.6% in presurgical months 1-12, 14.2% in the first 12 months post-bariatric surgery, and 13.4% during postsurgical months 13-24. These rates weren’t statistically different.
Dr. Shimada reported having no financial conflicts of interest regarding the two studies.
ORLANDO – Bariatric surgery in obese patients with heart failure was associated with a marked decrease in the subsequent rate of ED visits and hospitalizations for heart failure in a large, real-world, case-control study presented at the American Heart Association scientific sessions.
“This decline in the rate of heart failure morbidity was rapid in onset and sustained for at least 2 years after bariatric surgery,” according to Dr. Yuichi J. Shimada of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.
In a separate study, however, he found that bariatric surgery for obesity in patients with atrial fibrillation didn’t produce a reduction in ED visits and hospitalizations for the arrhythmia.
The heart failure study was a case-control study of 1,664 consecutive obese patients with heart failure who underwent a single bariatric surgical procedure in California, Florida, or Nebraska. Their median age was 49 years. Women accounted for 70% of the participants. Drawing upon federal Healthcare Cost and Utility Project databases on ED visits and hospital admissions in those three states, Dr. Shimada and coinvestigators compared the group’s rates of ED visits and hospitalizations for heart failure for 2 years before and 2 years after bariatric surgery. Thus, the subjects served as their own controls.
During the reference period, which lasted from months 13-24 presurgery, the group’s combined rate of ED visits and hospital admission for heart failure exacerbation was 14.4%. The rate wasn’t significantly different during the 12 months immediately prior to surgery, at 13.3%.
The rate dropped to 8.7% during the first 12 months after bariatric surgery and remained rock solid at 8.7% during months 13-24 postsurgery. In a logistic regression analysis, this translated to a 44% reduction in the risk of ED visits or hospital admission for heart failure during the first 2 years following bariatric surgery.
These findings are consistent with previous work by other investigators showing a link between obesity and heart failure exacerbations. The new data advance the field by providing the best evidence to date of the effectiveness of substantial weight loss on heart failure morbidity, Dr. Shimada observed.
Nonbariatric surgeries such as hysterectomy or cholecysectomy in the study population had no effect on the rate of heart failure exacerbations.
Dr. Shimada’s atrial fibrillation study was structured in the same way. It included 1,056 patients with atrial fibrillation who underwent bariatric surgery for obesity in the same three states. The rate of ED visits or hospitalization for heart failure was 12.1% in months 13-24 prior to bariatric surgery, 12.6% in presurgical months 1-12, 14.2% in the first 12 months post-bariatric surgery, and 13.4% during postsurgical months 13-24. These rates weren’t statistically different.
Dr. Shimada reported having no financial conflicts of interest regarding the two studies.
ORLANDO – Bariatric surgery in obese patients with heart failure was associated with a marked decrease in the subsequent rate of ED visits and hospitalizations for heart failure in a large, real-world, case-control study presented at the American Heart Association scientific sessions.
“This decline in the rate of heart failure morbidity was rapid in onset and sustained for at least 2 years after bariatric surgery,” according to Dr. Yuichi J. Shimada of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.
In a separate study, however, he found that bariatric surgery for obesity in patients with atrial fibrillation didn’t produce a reduction in ED visits and hospitalizations for the arrhythmia.
The heart failure study was a case-control study of 1,664 consecutive obese patients with heart failure who underwent a single bariatric surgical procedure in California, Florida, or Nebraska. Their median age was 49 years. Women accounted for 70% of the participants. Drawing upon federal Healthcare Cost and Utility Project databases on ED visits and hospital admissions in those three states, Dr. Shimada and coinvestigators compared the group’s rates of ED visits and hospitalizations for heart failure for 2 years before and 2 years after bariatric surgery. Thus, the subjects served as their own controls.
During the reference period, which lasted from months 13-24 presurgery, the group’s combined rate of ED visits and hospital admission for heart failure exacerbation was 14.4%. The rate wasn’t significantly different during the 12 months immediately prior to surgery, at 13.3%.
The rate dropped to 8.7% during the first 12 months after bariatric surgery and remained rock solid at 8.7% during months 13-24 postsurgery. In a logistic regression analysis, this translated to a 44% reduction in the risk of ED visits or hospital admission for heart failure during the first 2 years following bariatric surgery.
These findings are consistent with previous work by other investigators showing a link between obesity and heart failure exacerbations. The new data advance the field by providing the best evidence to date of the effectiveness of substantial weight loss on heart failure morbidity, Dr. Shimada observed.
Nonbariatric surgeries such as hysterectomy or cholecysectomy in the study population had no effect on the rate of heart failure exacerbations.
Dr. Shimada’s atrial fibrillation study was structured in the same way. It included 1,056 patients with atrial fibrillation who underwent bariatric surgery for obesity in the same three states. The rate of ED visits or hospitalization for heart failure was 12.1% in months 13-24 prior to bariatric surgery, 12.6% in presurgical months 1-12, 14.2% in the first 12 months post-bariatric surgery, and 13.4% during postsurgical months 13-24. These rates weren’t statistically different.
Dr. Shimada reported having no financial conflicts of interest regarding the two studies.
AT THE AHA SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS
Key clinical point: Bariatric surgery in obese patients with heart failure results in a dramatic reduction in ED visits and hospital admission for heart failure.
Major finding: The combined rate of ED visits and hospital admissions for heart failure dropped by 44% during the 2 years after a large group of patients with heart failure underwent bariatric surgery for obesity.
Data source: This case-control study compared the rates of ED visits and hospital admissions for worsening heart failure in 1,664 patients with heart failure during the 2 years before and 2 years after they underwent bariatric surgery for obesity.
Disclosures: The presenter reported having no financial conflicts of interest regarding the study, which utilized publicly available patient data.