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Trends in Serum Vitamin D Levels within 12 Months after One Anastomosis Gastric Bypass (OAGB).

Obesity surgery
September 1, 2021
Fatemeh Bourbour et al. (9 authors)
Journal ArticleObservational StudyHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to assess the trend of serum vitamin D and its associations with calcium and other biochemical measurements in patients undergoing one anastomosis gastric bypass (OAGB).

Results Summary

Vitamin D levels significantly increased post-surgery, but no significant correlations were found between vitamin D and calcium, phosphorus, or other measured parameters. The study concluded that >800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation was sufficient to prevent deficiency after OAGB.

Population

98 patients undergoing OAGB in a bariatric surgery center.

Effective Dosage

>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation.

Duration

12 months post-surgery.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (18)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
increase
Vitamin D levels
98 patients undergoing OAGB
from 26.52 ± 12.32 to 54.52 ± 27.90 ng/mL
significantly improved
#1
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
increase
lipid profile
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
significantly improved
#2
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
increase
creatinine levels
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
significantly improved
#3
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
increase
albumin levels
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
significantly improved
#4
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
vitamin D concentrations and weight
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
correlations were not significant
#5
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
vitamin D concentrations and body mass index
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
correlations were not significant
#6
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
vitamin D concentrations and lipid profile
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
correlations were not significant
#7
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
vitamin D concentrations and ferritin
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
correlations were not significant
#8
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
vitamin D concentrations and glycemic indices
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
correlations were not significant
#9
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
vitamin D concentrations and albumin
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
correlations were not significant
#10
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
vitamin D and parathormone
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
did not reach the threshold of statistical significance
#11
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
vitamin D and vitamin D receptor
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
did not reach the threshold of statistical significance
#12
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
vitamin D and calcium
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
did not reach the threshold of statistical significance
#13
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
vitamin D and phosphorus
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
did not reach the threshold of statistical significance
#14
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
vitamin D and body composition
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
did not reach the threshold of statistical significance
#15
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
vitamin D and basal metabolic rate (BMR)
98 patients undergoing OAGB
-
did not reach the threshold of statistical significance
#16
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
no change
weight change percent and vitamin D
98 patients undergoing OAGB
r = 0.120, P = 0.271
no significant correlations
#17
>800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation
decrease
vitamin D deficiency
patients after OAGB surgery
-
is sufficient for prevention of vitamin D deficiency
#18
Abstract

PURPOSE: To assess serum vitamin D trend from baseline to 12 months after one anastomosis gastric bypass (OAGB). MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this observational cohort analysis of longitudinal data, we assessed the trend of serum vitamin D, and its associations with anthropometric, and biochemical measurements in 98 patients undergoing OAGB in a bariatric surgery center. All participants were on >800 IU/day vitamin D supplementation. RESULTS: Vitamin D, lipid profile, creatinine, and albumin levels significantly improved at 12 months post-surgery. Vitamin D concentrations significantly increased from 26.52 ± 12.32 to 54.52 ± 27.90 ng/mL at 12 months. The correlations between vitamin D concentrations and weight, body mass index, lipid profile, ferritin, glycemic indices, and albumin were not significant. In addition, the correlations between vitamin D and parathormone, vitamin D receptor, calcium, phosphorus, body composition, and basal metabolic rate (BMR) did not reach the threshold of statistical significance at 12 months following bariatric surgery. Although there was a significant correlation between body weight and body composition (P < 0.001) and basal metabolic rate (BMR) (r = 0.762, P < 0.001) at 12 months, there were no significant correlations between weight change percent and body composition (P > 0.05), BMR (r = -0.101, P = 0.350), and vitamin D (r = 0.120, P = 0.271) at 12 months. CONCLUSION: Our results showed that supplementation of vitamin D with dosage of >800 IU/day is sufficient for prevention of vitamin D deficiency within 12 months after OAGB surgery. Note: This data is mandatory.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Bariatric SurgeryGastric BypassHumansObesity, MorbidRetrospective StudiesVitamin D
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations2
Citations/Year0.5
Relative Citation Ratio0.19
NIH Percentile9.5%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score2.21
Normalized Score0.66
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