A 1991 National Institutes of Health Consensus Conference concluded that severely obese adults could be eligible for bariatric
surgery if they had a body mass index (BMI) ≥35 kg/m
2 with or ≥40 kg/m
2 without obesity comorbidity. It was thought at that time that there were inadequate data to support bariatric surgery in
severely obese adolescents. An estimated 25% of children in the United States are obese, a number that has doubled over a
30-year period. Very little information has been published on the subject of obesity surgery in adolescents. Therefore we
reviewed our 20-year database on bariatric surgery in adolescents. Severely obese adolescents, ranging from 12 to less than
18 years of age, were considered eligible for bariatric surgery according to the National Institutes of Health adult criteria.
Gastroplasty was the procedure of choice in the initial 3 years of the study followed by gastric bypass, which was found to
be significantly more effective for weight loss in adults. Distal gastric bypass (D-GBP) was used in extremely obese patients
(BMI ≥60 kg/m
2) before 1992 and long-limb gastric bypass (LL-GBP) was used for super-obese patients (BMI ≥50 kg/m
2) after 1992. Laparoscopic gastric bypass was used after 2000. Thirty-three adolescents (27 white, 6 black; 19 females, 14
males) underwent the following bariatric operations between 1981 and June 2001: horizontal gastroplasty in one, vertical banded
gastroplasty in two, standard gastric bypass in 17 (2 laparoscopic), LL-GBP in 10, and D-GBP in three. Mean BMI was 52 ±11
kg/m
2 (range 38 to 91 kg/m
2), and mean age was 16 ± 1 years (range 12.4 to 17.9 years). Preoperative comorbid conditions included the following: type
II diabetes mellitus in two patients, hypertension in 11, pseudotumor cerebri in three, gastroesophageal reflux in five, sleep
apnea in six, urinary incontinence in two, polycystic ovary syndrome in one, asthma in one, and degenerative joint disease
in 11. There were no operative deaths or anastomotic leaks. Early complications included pulmonary embolism in one patient,
major wound infection in one, minor wound infections in four, stomal stenoses (endoscopically dilated) in three, and marginal
ulcers (medically treated) in four. Late complications included small bowel obstruction in one and incisional hernias in six
patients. There were two late sudden deaths (2 years and 6 years postop-eratively), but these were unlikely to have been caused
by the bariatric surgical procedure. Revision procedures included one D-GBP to gastric bypass for malnutrition and one gastric
bypass to LL-GBP for inadequate weight loss. Regain of most or all of the lost weight was seen in five patients at 5 to 10
years after surgery; however, significant weight loss was maintained in the remaining patients for up to 14 years after surgery.
Comorbid conditions resolved at 1 year with the exception of hypertension in two patients, gastroesophageal reflux in two,
and degenerative joint disease in seven. Self-image was greatly enhanced; eight patients have married and have children, five
patients have completed college, and one patient is currently in college. Severe obesity is increasing rapidly in adolescents
and is associated with significant comorbidity and social stigmatization. Bariatric surgery in adolescents is safe and is
associated with significant weight loss, correction of obesity comorbidity, and improved self-image and socialization. These
data strongly support obesity surgery for those unfortunate individuals who may have difficulty obtaining insurance coverage
based on the 1991 National Institutes of Health Consensus Conference statement.
Key words obesity - surgery - adolescent - bariatric
Presented at the Forty-Third Annual Meeting of The Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract, San Francisco, California,
May 19–22, 2002 (oral presentation).