Author:
Seifert Gabriel,Fagnocchi Luca,Edozie Michael,Herrmann Stephan,Baumann Hannah,Panzeri Ilaria,Mewes Stephanie,Aicher David,Runkel Mira,Lässle Claudia,Fink Jodok,Marjanovic Goran,Fichtner-Feigl Stephan,Pospisilik J. Andrew
Abstract
AbstractObesity is a chronic, multifactorial disease which is linked to a number of adverse endocrinological and metabolic conditions. Currently, bariatric surgery is one of the most effective treatments for individuals diagnosed with severe obesity. However, the current indications for bariatric surgery are based on inadequate metrics (i.e., BMI) which do not account for the complexity of the disease, nor the heterogeneity among the patient population. Moreover, there is a lack of understanding with respect to the biological underpinnings that influence successful and sustained weight loss post-bariatric surgery. Studies have implicated age and pre-surgery body weight as two factors that are associated with favorable patient outcomes. Still, there is an urgent medical need to identify other potential factors that could improve the specificity of candidate selection and better inform the treatment plan of patients with obesity. In this report, we present and describe the cohort of the DECON pilot project, a multicenter study which aims to identify predictive biomarkers of successful weight loss after bariatric surgery.
Funder
NIH
H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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