Changes in Plasma Sphingolipid Metabolites Following Roux‐En‐Y Gastric Bypass in Women With Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes: A Pilot Metabolomic Cohort Study
Gabriela de Oliveira Lemos, Raquel Susana Torrinhas, Natasha Mendonça Machado, Dan Linetzky Waitzberg

TL;DR
This study explores how Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery affects plasma sphingolipids in women with obesity and type 2 diabetes, finding significant changes linked to cholesterol levels.
Contribution
The study identifies specific sphingolipid species that change after surgery and correlate with lipid profile improvements, suggesting potential biomarkers.
Findings
RYGB surgery significantly altered 21 of 32 plasma sphingolipid metabolites.
Sphingolipids SM(d18:1/20:0) and SM(d18:1/22:0) showed strong correlations with total cholesterol and LDL-c post-surgery.
Glycemic improvement was observed in 18 participants, with overall metabolic and body composition improvements.
Abstract
Although sphingolipids are key players in lipotoxicity and metabolic diseases, their response to bariatric surgery and their relation to metabolic improvement remain unclear. This pilot study investigated plasma sphingolipid remodeling after Roux‐en‐Y gastric bypass (RYGB) and its associations with clinical and biochemical markers of postoperative metabolic improvement in women with obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2DM). Plasma samples, anthropometric, body composition, and biochemical data (glucose, HbA1c, insulin, C‐peptide, and lipid profile) were collected from 30 participants before and 3 months after surgery. T2DM remission was defined according to ADA 2021 criteria. Plasma sphingolipids were identified using untargeted metabolomics, which involved ultra‐performance liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed using Jamovi…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSphingolipid Metabolism and Signaling · Bariatric Surgery and Outcomes · Metabolomics and Mass Spectrometry Studies
