Risk of completed suicide after bariatric surgery: a systematic review

Summary Bariatric surgery is one of the most effective treatments for morbid obesity, and a large body of research indicates significant long‐term weight loss. While overall mortality decreases in patients who received bariatric surgery, a number of studies have shown that suicide rates are higher i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Obesity reviews 2013-05, Vol.14 (5), p.369-382
Hauptverfasser: Peterhänsel, C., Petroff, D., Klinitzke, G., Kersting, A., Wagner, B.
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container_end_page 382
container_issue 5
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container_title Obesity reviews
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creator Peterhänsel, C.
Petroff, D.
Klinitzke, G.
Kersting, A.
Wagner, B.
description Summary Bariatric surgery is one of the most effective treatments for morbid obesity, and a large body of research indicates significant long‐term weight loss. While overall mortality decreases in patients who received bariatric surgery, a number of studies have shown that suicide rates are higher in bariatric patients than in control groups. The objective of this study was to present a systematic review of suicide mortality after bariatric surgery and calculate an estimate for the suicide rate. Literature researches of the databases PubMed, Web of Knowledge, PsychInfo, ScienceDirect and Google Scholar were conducted. Thirty studies concerning bariatric surgery and completed suicides met the inclusion criteria. We included 28 studies in the estimation of a suicide rate for the bariatric population. Only one study (Tindle et al.) put a main focus on suicide after bariatric surgery; this was therefore chosen as an adequate reference figure for comparison. The other 27 chosen studies were compared with World Health Organization data and the suicide rate reported by Tindle et al. Twenty‐three thousand eight hundred eighty‐five people were included in the analysis. In the literature, we found a total of 95 suicides when examining 190,000 person‐years of post‐bariatric surgery data. Little information was provided describing the reasons for suicide and the time‐point of these events after surgery. We estimated a suicide rate of 4.1/10,000 person‐years (95% confidence interval [3.2, 5.1]/10,000 person‐years). A comparison with Tindle et al. demonstrates that their rate is significantly higher than our estimate (P = 0.03). Bariatric surgery patients show higher suicide rates than the general population. Therefore, there is a great need to identify persons at risk and post‐operative psychological monitoring is recommended.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/obr.12014
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While overall mortality decreases in patients who received bariatric surgery, a number of studies have shown that suicide rates are higher in bariatric patients than in control groups. The objective of this study was to present a systematic review of suicide mortality after bariatric surgery and calculate an estimate for the suicide rate. Literature researches of the databases PubMed, Web of Knowledge, PsychInfo, ScienceDirect and Google Scholar were conducted. Thirty studies concerning bariatric surgery and completed suicides met the inclusion criteria. We included 28 studies in the estimation of a suicide rate for the bariatric population. Only one study (Tindle et al.) put a main focus on suicide after bariatric surgery; this was therefore chosen as an adequate reference figure for comparison. The other 27 chosen studies were compared with World Health Organization data and the suicide rate reported by Tindle et al. Twenty‐three thousand eight hundred eighty‐five people were included in the analysis. In the literature, we found a total of 95 suicides when examining 190,000 person‐years of post‐bariatric surgery data. Little information was provided describing the reasons for suicide and the time‐point of these events after surgery. We estimated a suicide rate of 4.1/10,000 person‐years (95% confidence interval [3.2, 5.1]/10,000 person‐years). A comparison with Tindle et al. demonstrates that their rate is significantly higher than our estimate (P = 0.03). Bariatric surgery patients show higher suicide rates than the general population. 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subjects Bariatric surgery
Bariatric Surgery - psychology
depression
Depression - epidemiology
Humans
Obesity, Morbid - psychology
Obesity, Morbid - surgery
Risk Factors
suicide
Suicide - psychology
Suicide - statistics & numerical data
title Risk of completed suicide after bariatric surgery: a systematic review
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