Is Routine Preoperative Esophagogastroduodenoscopy Prior to Bariatric Surgery Mandatory? Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of 10,685 Patients.
Walid El AnsariAyman El-MenyarBrijesh SathianHassan Al-ThaniMohammed Al-KuwariAbdulla Al-AnsariPublished in: Obesity surgery (2021)
For 82% of patients, routine p-EGD did not change surgical plan/ postpone surgery. For 16% of patients, p-EGD findings necessitated changing the surgical approach/ postponing surgery, but the proportion of postponements due to medical treatment of H Pylori as opposed to "necessary" substantial change in surgical approach is unclear. For 0.4% patients, p-EGD findings signified absolute contraindication to surgery. These findings invite a revisit to whether p-EGD should be routine before BS, and whether it is judicious to expose many obese patients to an invasive procedure that has potential risk and insufficient evidence of effectiveness. Further justification is required.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- systematic review
- bariatric surgery
- minimally invasive
- ejection fraction
- obese patients
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- peritoneal dialysis
- randomized controlled trial
- coronary artery bypass
- coronary artery disease
- combination therapy
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- patient reported
- meta analyses
- gastric bypass