Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Outcomes in Patients with Gastroparesis: A Retrospective Analysis of the 2016 to 2022 Nationwide Readmissions Database

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Journal of gastrointestinal surgery : official journal of the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A subset of patients pursuing metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS) for obesity treatment have gastroparesis. It remains unclear how gastroparesis influences MBS outcomes. METHODS: We queried the 2016-2022 Nationwide Readmissions Database for patients ≥18 years with obesity undergoing sleeve gastrectomy (SG) or Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB). Our primary outcomes were 30-day readmission, 30-day reoperation, length of stay (LOS), and discharge disposition; a secondary outcome was procedure type. We investigated the unadjusted (using t-tests, Kruskal-Wallis, and chi-square tests) and adjusted (using logistic regression) associations between gastroparesis status and outcomes. RESULTS: Of a total 1,120,048 patients, 0.5% had gastroparesis. Patients with gastroparesis were proportionally more likely to undergo RYGB compared to patients without gastroparesis (65.6% vs. 30.3%, p<0.001). Additionally, patients with gastroparesis had higher readmission (7.7% vs 3.4%, p<0.001) and reoperation rates (2.3% vs. 1.0%, p<0.001) and were more likely to have longer LOS (median days: 2.0 vs. 1.0, p<0.001) and require home health services (3.1% vs 1.8%, p<0.001). After adjusting for sociodemographic and clinical factors, patients with gastroparesis were 63.0% more likely to experience readmission (aOR=1.64, 95%CI 1.36-1.96), 58.0% more likely to undergo reoperation (aOR=1.58, 95%CI 1.12-2.28), and 75.4% more likely to stay >72hours in the hospital (aOR=1.75, 95%CI 1.46-2.11). CONCLUSION: MBS patients with gastroparesis more frequently undergo RYGB compared to the MBS population without gastroparesis. Those with gastroparesis experience higher rates of readmission and reoperation and are more likely to have longer LOS. MBS teams should consider counseling patients on the risk of these postoperative events.

First Page

102107

DOI

10.1016/j.gassur.2025.102107

Publication Date

6-2-2025

Identifier

40466804 (pubmed); 10.1016/j.gassur.2025.102107 (doi); S1091-255X(25)00166-0 (pii)

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