The Effect of Surgical Weight Loss on Cognition in Individuals with Class II/III Obesity

E. L. Reynolds, K. L. Votruba, M. Watanabe, M. Banerjee, M. A. Elafros, Ericka Chant, E. Villegas-Umana, B. Giordani, E. L. Feldman, Brian C. Callaghan
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Abstract

To Background

Obesity is a global epidemic and is associated with cognitive impairment and dementia. It remains unknown whether weight loss interventions, such as bariatric surgery, can mitigate cognitive impairment.

Objectives

We aimed to determine the effect of surgical weight loss on cognition in individuals with class II/III obesity.

Design

We performed a prospective cohort study of participants who underwent bariatric surgery. At baseline and two years following surgery, participants completed metabolic risk factor and neuropsychological assessments.

Setting

Participants were enrolled from an academic suburban bariatric surgery clinic.

Participants

There were 113 participants who completed baseline assessments and 87 completed two-year follow-up assessments (66 in-person and 21 virtual) after bariatric surgery. The mean (SD) age was 46.8 (12.5) years and 64 (73.6%) were female.

Intervention

Bariatric surgery. There were 77 (88.5%) participants that underwent sleeve gastrectomy and 10 (11.5%) that underwent gastric bypass surgery.

Measurements

Cognition was assessed using the NIH toolbox cognitive battery (NIHTB-CB) and the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (AVLT). The primary outcome was the change in NIHTB-CB fluid composite score before and after surgery.

Results

The primary outcome, NIHTB-CB composite score, was stable following bariatric surgery (−0.4 (13.9), p=0.81,n=66). Among secondary outcomes, the NIHTB-CB dimensional card sorting test (executive function assessment), improved (+6.5 (19.9), p=0.01, n=66) while the Rey AVLT delayed recall test (memory assessment) declined (−0.24 (0.83), p=0.01, n=87) following surgery. Improvements to metabolic risk factors and diabetes complications were not associated with improvements to NIHTB-CB composite score. The other 4 NIHTB-CB subtests and Rey AVLT assessments of auditory learning and recognition were stable at follow-up.

Conclusions

Following bariatric surgery, the age-adjusted composite cognitive outcome did not change, but an executive subtest score improved. These results suggest that bariatric surgery may mitigate the natural history of cognitive decline in individuals with obesity, which is expected to be faster than normal aging, but confirmatory randomized controlled trials are needed. The decline in delayed recall also warrants further studies to determine potential differential effects on cognitive subtests.

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II/III类肥胖患者手术减重对认知的影响
背景肥胖是一种全球性流行病,与认知障碍和痴呆有关。目前尚不清楚减肥干预措施,如减肥手术,是否能减轻认知障碍。目的:我们旨在确定手术减肥对II/III类肥胖患者认知能力的影响。设计:我们对接受减肥手术的参与者进行了一项前瞻性队列研究。在基线和手术后两年,参与者完成代谢危险因素和神经心理学评估。参与者来自郊区一家学术减肥手术诊所。参与者有113名参与者在减肥手术后完成了基线评估,87名参与者完成了两年的随访评估(66名面对面评估,21名虚拟评估)。平均(SD)年龄为46.8(12.5)岁,女性64(73.6%)。InterventionBariatric手术。有77名(88.5%)参与者接受了袖式胃切除术,10名(11.5%)参与者接受了胃旁路手术。使用NIH工具箱认知电池(NIHTB-CB)和Rey听觉语言学习测试(AVLT)评估认知能力。主要观察指标为手术前后NIHTB-CB液体综合评分的变化。结果减肥手术后的主要终点NIHTB-CB综合评分稳定(- 0.4 (13.9),p=0.81,n=66)。在次要结果中,NIHTB-CB维度卡片分类测试(执行功能评估)改善(+6.5 (19.9),p=0.01, n=66),而Rey AVLT延迟回忆测试(记忆评估)下降(- 0.24 (0.83),p=0.01, n=87)。代谢危险因素和糖尿病并发症的改善与NIHTB-CB综合评分的改善无关。其他4项NIHTB-CB子测试和Rey AVLT听觉学习和识别评估在随访时稳定。结论:减肥手术后,年龄调整后的复合认知结果没有改变,但执行子测试得分有所提高。这些结果表明,减肥手术可能会减轻肥胖患者认知能力下降的自然史,这可能比正常衰老更快,但需要证实的随机对照试验。延迟回忆的下降也值得进一步研究,以确定对认知子测试的潜在差异影响。
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