Short-term Weight Trajectory of Severely Obese Individuals With and Without Pathogenic Satiety-Regulation Melanocortin 3/4 Receptor (MC3/4R) Mutations From a Multi-ethnic Asian Large Bariatric Surgery Program

Author:

Lim Joel Guanyi1,Moh Angela2,Pandian Bhuvaneswari2ORCID,Ubeynarayana Chalani Udhyami2,Lim Nathaniel Guanning3,Tan Bo Chuan2,Ng Deborah2,Subramaniam Tavintharan24,Cheng Anton2,Lim Su Chi2456ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, Singapore

2. Khoo Teck Puat Hospital, Singapore

3. Hwa Chong Junior College, Singapore

4. Admiralty Medical Centre, Singapore

5. Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine, Singapore

6. Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, Singapore

Abstract

The melanocortin (3 or 4) receptor (MC3/4R) is involved in regulating satiety and body weight. Therefore, pathogenic mutation in MC3/4R is associated with severe obesity, for which bariatric surgery is one of the treatment options. However, there is limited data on whether individuals with MC3/4R mutation will have differential weight response to surgery, especially among the Asian populations—the epi-center of the evolving global obesity epidemic. From our large prospective Obesity—Metabolism & Intervention Cohort Study (OMICS; N = 654, recruited between 2007 and 2022), 5 individuals with pathogenic MC3/4R mutations (“case”) were identified using candidate-genes panel next-generation sequencing (Illumina iSeq). These subjects were carefully propensity score–matched (baseline body mass index [BMI], age, sex, ethnicity, proportion with diabetes, type of bariatric surgery) in a 1:4 ratio to other controls. We performed linear mixed model analysis (for repeated measurements) to compare their longitudinal weight trajectories (percentage total weight loss, %TWL) over 12 months. The 5 cases with MC3/4R mutations were 48 ± 11 years, BMI 40.8 ± 11.2 kg/m2, 60% with diabetes, and all males. Their weight at baseline (pre-op), and 6 months and 12 months after surgery were 120 ± 38, 100 ± 31, and 101 ± 30 kg, respectively. Compared with propensity score–matched controls (N = 20), linear mixed model analysis suggested no difference in surgically induced %TWL (β coefficient = −5.8 ± 3.7, P = .13) over 12 months between the groups. Therefore, we conclude that rare pathogenic MC3/4R mutations do not significantly modify weight change (%TWL) in response to bariatric surgery.

Funder

Alexandra Health Fund Ltd

National Medical Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Safety Research,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality,Epidemiology

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