Background
Following laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding (LAGB), patients usually undergo follow-up (FU) to optimize weight loss
and detect complications, with band-volume adjustment performed either under radiological or clinical guidance with no current
consensus on what is the best standard of care. We, therefore, analyzed our patient cohort to identify differences between
the two, if any, over a 3-year period.
Methods
We retrospectively reviewed our obesity surgery database to find all LAGB patients and grouped them based on method of FU
without weight exclusions. We then selected out 70 consecutive patients from each cohort from an arbitrary time-point to achieve
sufficient FU and analyzed the results from the data collated. Patients with postoperative complications were excluded to
prevent bias.
Results
From 2003 to 2007, there were 865 LAGB performed in our unit. We identified 70 consecutive patients from January 2004 from
each cohort. After review and exclusions, we were left with 50 patients in the radiology group (RG) and 49 in the clinical
group (CG) [median BMI 43.8 and 47.1, respectively; median age 43 years in both]. Routine FU was at weekly, then fortnightly,
and monthly intervals, but results were analyzed at 3-month intervals until the first year and every 12 months until the third
year. The median percentage of excessive weight loss was 22% and 36% at 6 months; 28% and 43% at 12 months; 27% and 47% at
2 years; and 33% and 46% at 3 years in the RG and CG, respectively. There was no difference in difficulties to band fill in
either group as per clinical records, although there was a greater incidence of port damage in the CG.
Conclusions
Our study suggests that at medium-term follow-up, clinical fill is superior to radiological FU at least in terms of weight
loss, with the added benefit of avoiding unnecessary radiation albeit that the difference between the two methods gets smaller
with FU beyond 2 years. This topic merits a future randomized control trial to make recommendations without biases inherent
to retrospective analysis.
Keywords Obesity surgery - Gastric band - Radiological band fill - Clinical band fill - Follow-up
Declaration: None of the authors have any vested commercial interests that could affect the contents of this manuscript.