Probing problems with bariatric surgery: Reoperations, variation are common

Probing problems with bariatric surgery: Reoperations, variation are common
The laparoscopic adjustable gastric band form of bariatric surgery is less common today than in previous years, but new research shows nearly 1 in 5 Medicare patients who had had it between 2006 and 2013 needed a second operation. Credit: University of Michigan

Every year, nearly 200,000 Americans turn to surgeons for help with their obesity, seeking bariatric surgery to lose weight and prevent life-threatening health problems.

But after more than two decades of steadily increasing numbers of operations, American centers still vary greatly in the quality of care they provide.

That's the finding of a team of researchers at the University of Michigan who used data from insurers that pay for bariatric operations, and from a statewide partnership of bariatric surgery teams, to study the issue of bariatric surgery outcomes.

Just in the past few months, the U-M team has published several papers that shed new light on the high level of variability and incidence of complications that patients still face.

"As Americans turn to bariatric and metabolic operations in higher and higher numbers, and as our county grapples with the ongoing obesity epidemic, it's more important than ever to take a clear-eyed look at how well our surgical centers are doing, and to try to improve the care patients receive," says Andrew M. Ibrahim, M.D., M.Sc., the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar and U-M surgical resident who led many of the new studies as part of his work at the U-M Center for Healthcare Outcomes and Policy.

Their most recent findings:

Nearly 1 in 5 patients with Medicare who have laparoscopic adjustable gastric band surgery will end up needing at least one more device-related operation, either to remove or replace the band around the upper portion of their stomach, or to switch to a different stomach-remodeling approach. The results were published in JAMA Surgery.

Additional device-related procedures for the operation were so common, in fact, that nearly half (47%) of the $470 million paid by Medicare for such procedures was for reoperations to revise or remove it. "If half the money we're spending on a device is to revise or remove it, we ought to ask ourselves if we should still be using it," says Ibrahim.

Though this form of bariatric surgery has declined sharply in popularity in recent years, and now makes up only about five percent of all operations, there are still hundreds of thousands of people who have the devices from past operations. So failure of the devices to result in weight loss, or complications from their placement, pose a potential major issue. The study finds tremendous variation between surgical centers in the rate of reoperation that their patients faced.

The new study looks at data from 25,042 people who had operations between 2006 and 2013, and who were covered by Medicare, which pays for about 15 percent of all bariatric operations.

Another recent paper from the U-M team finds that even accredited bariatric "centers of excellence" can vary greatly in the rate of complications their patients suffer after their operations.

Published in JAMA Surgery, the study looked at data from more than 145,500 patients and found a 17-fold difference between the centers with the highest and lowest rates of serious complications. It found that even within a single state, one bariatric surgery center can have nine times the complication rate of another center.

"While we have made significant progress improving the safety of bariatric surgery over the last two decades, the presence of 17-fold variation in complications rates across accredited centers underscores that we need to improve further," Ibrahim notes.

The team also recently studied how variations in quality affect the cost of care, which ultimately affects both the premiums paid by those with private insurance, and public costs for the care of people who have operations paid for by Medicare and Medicaid.

They looked at data from 38,374 patients covered by Medicare for bariatric surgery between 2011 and 2013, and found that hospitals with the lowest complication rates perform bariatric procedures for $1,321 less per patient than hospitals with the highest complication rates. When they focused on patients with additional risk factors that made them more prone to surgical complications, that difference grew to more than $2,600 per patient.

So, the researchers conclude in the paper in Annals of Surgery, efforts to improve bariatric quality could significantly affect not only , but also the cost of care.

More information: Andrew M. Ibrahim et al, Reoperation and Medicare Expenditures After Laparoscopic Gastric Band Surgery, JAMA Surgery (2017). DOI: 10.1001/jamasurg.2017.1093

Journal information: JAMA Surgery , Annals of Surgery
Citation: Probing problems with bariatric surgery: Reoperations, variation are common (2017, May 23) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2017-05-probing-problems-bariatric-surgery-reoperations.html
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