Volume‒outcome relationships in bariatric surgery: a rapid review
Alessandro Campione, Ulrike Nimptsch, Helene Eckhardt, Cornelia Henschke

TL;DR
This review finds that higher hospital and surgeon volumes in bariatric surgery are linked to better short-term outcomes like lower mortality and fewer complications.
Contribution
The study provides a rapid review of volume-outcome relationships in bariatric surgery, focusing on mortality and quality of care.
Findings
Higher hospital and surgeon volumes were associated with reduced short-term mortality.
Most studies linked higher volumes to fewer complications and shorter hospital stays.
Study quality varied, with limitations such as arbitrary volume thresholds.
Abstract
The treatment of obesity is complex and requires long-term multidisciplinary care. While behavioral, pharmacological and psychological therapies are integral, bariatric surgery remains the most effective intervention. Therapeutic success is influenced by factors such as comorbidities and potentially by the experience of the treatment facilities. This rapid review evaluates the evidence of volume-outcome associations in bariatric surgery, focusing on the endpoint of mortality. We performed a rapid review of the literature published after 2000, including adult patients (≥18 years) who underwent bariatric surgery for weight loss, or weight loss and diabetes management. Searches across EMBASE, MEDLINE, PubMed, and Cochrane Trials yielded 3540 records. The primary outcome was mortality; secondary outcomes included complications, morbidity and hospital stay. Mortality results were stratified…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBariatric Surgery and Outcomes · Obesity and Health Practices · Esophageal Cancer Research and Treatment
