Bariatric surgery can reduce the risk of eye cataracts occurring in patients who have lost weight, according to a study presented at this year's European Congress on Obesity by Dr Theresa Burkard, ETH Zurich, Switzerland, and colleagues from Sweden and Switzerland.
A previous meta-analysis reported that overweight and obesity were risk factors for cataract development. In this study, the authors hypothesised that weight loss in patients with obesity may be associated with a lower incidence of cataract potentially due to decreased oxidative stress, less systemic inflammation, and remission of diabetes and hypertension in patients with those conditions.
They used data from Swedish nationwide healthcare registries in their analyses. Patients aged 40-79 years old who underwent bariatric surgery between 2006 and 2019 were matched to bariatric surgery-free patients with obesity. Statistical modelling was then used to calculate the risk of incident cataract among bariatric surgery patients compared to non-operated patients with obesity.
A total of 22,560 bariatric surgery patients were matched to 35,523 patients with obesity but no surgery. Patients were followed for a mean duration of around six years. The data showed that the risk of cataract was decreased by 29% in the bariatric surgery group, compared to matched patients with obesity but no surgery.
The risk of cataract development in bariatric surgery patients compared to patients with obesity but no surgery increased with age: the lowest risk of cataract was observed in patients aged 40-49 years, where those who had bariatric surgery were around half as likely to develop cataract compared to patients not having had obesity surgery. However, in patients aged 60 years or over, the beneficial effect seemed to disappear, with no significant difference in the risk of cataract between groups.
Furthermore, the authors observed that surgical techniques generally leading to higher weight loss and a higher risk of malabsorption of nutrients, such as duodenal switch or gastric bypass, were associated with the lowest risks of cataract (51% statistically non-significant decreased risk of cataract after duodenal switch, 32% statistically significant decreased risk of cataract after gastric bypass).
Sleeve gastrectomy on the other hand, generally leads to slightly less weight loss and malabsorption of nutrients, and there was no difference in cataract risk between patients who underwent sleeve gastrectomy and those not undergoing bariatric surgery. The authors also observed no differences between sexes; both men and women yielded equally reduced cataract risk following bariatric surgery.
"Substantial weight loss is associated with a decreased risk of cataract, especially if obesity surgery was performed before age 60. This decreased risk is an addition to the multitude of positive effects that weight loss has on eye health,” the authors concluded. “Furthermore, we observed a potential dose-response relationship between the amount of weight loss and reduction in cataract incidence."
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