Evaluation of Long-Term Nutrition Outcomes After Duodenal Switch: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Nakanishi et al., 2024 | Am Surg | Meta Analysis

Citation

Nakanishi Hayato, Abi Mosleh Kamal, ... Ghanem Omar M. Evaluation of Long-Term Nutrition Outcomes After Duodenal Switch: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Am Surg. 2024-Mar;90(3):399-410. doi:10.1177/00031348231201886

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch (BPD-DS) is the most effective and durable metabolic and bariatric surgery to achieve a target weight loss. However, many surgeons are hesitant to adopt BPD-DS due to a lack of training, technical complexity, and long-term nutrition deficiencies. This meta-analysis aimed to investigate long-term nutrition outcomes after primary BPD-DS in the management of obesity. METHODS: Cochrane, Embase, PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science were searched for articles from their inception to February 2023 by 2 independent reviewers using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis (PRISMA) system. The review was registered prospectively with PROSPERO (CRD42023391316). RESULTS: From 834 studies screened, 8 studies met the eligibility criteria, with a total of 3443 patients with obesity undergoing primary BPD-DS. At long-term follow-up (≥5 years), 25.4% of patients had vitamin A deficiency (95% CI: -.012, .520, I2 = 94%), and 57.3% had vitamin D deficiency (95% CI: .059, 1.086, I2 = 86%). Calcium deficiency was observed in 125 patients (22.2%, 95% CI: .061, .383, I2 = 97%), and 69.7% had an abnormal parathyroid hormone level (95% CI: .548, .847, I2 = 78%). Ferritin level was abnormal in 30 patients (29.0%, 95% CI: .099, .481, I2 = 79%). CONCLUSIONS: Despite displaying comparable nutrition-related outcomes to mid-term follow-up, our study demonstrated that BPD-DS could result in a high level of long-term nutrition deficiency after BPD-DS for selected patients. However, further randomized controlled studies with standardized supplementation regimens and improvement in compliance are necessary to evaluate and prevent long-term nutritional deficiencies after BPD-DS.

Key Findings

From 834 studies screened, 8 studies met the eligibility criteria, with a total of 3443 patients with obesity undergoing primary BPD-DS. At long-term follow-up (≥5 years), 25.4% of patients had vitamin A deficiency (95% CI: -.012, .520, I2 = 94%), and 57.3% had vitamin D deficiency (95% CI: .059, 1.086, I2 = 86%). Calcium deficiency was observed in 125 patients (22.2%, 95% CI: .061, .383, I2 = 97%), and 69.7% had an abnormal parathyroid hormone level (95% CI: .548, .847, I2 = 78%). Ferritin leve

Outcomes Measured

  • Requires manual extraction

Population

Field Value
Population obesity undergoing primary bpd
Sample Size 3443
Age Range See abstract
Condition deficiency

MeSH Terms

  • Humans
  • Obesity, Morbid
  • Duodenum
  • Biliopancreatic Diversion
  • Malnutrition
  • Obesity
  • Retrospective Studies

Evidence Classification

  • Level: Meta Analysis
  • Publication Types: Meta-Analysis, Systematic Review, Journal Article
  • Vertical: vitamin-a

Provenance


Source extracted via PubMed E-utilities API on 2026-04-09