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Endocrine Abstracts (2016) 41 EP781 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.41.EP781

Hospital de Braga, Braga, Portugal.


Introduction: The economic burden of obesity on healthcare systems is increasing. Bariatric surgery leads to considerable weight loss and health improvement. However, this surgery is costly and doubts about its affordability have been raised. Few studies have assessed outcomes such as drug use and costs after bariatric surgery. The aim of this study was to evaluate drug consumption and costs before and after bariatric surgery.

Methods: Retrospectively, databases of 72 patients who underwent bariatric surgery in 2014 were analyzed. Therapies and comorbidities related to obesity were reviewed preoperatively and at 6 months postoperatively. Drug prices were calculated accordingly to table prices of the National Health Service.

Results: Pre and postoperatively prevalence of comorbidities related to obesity were respectively: hypertension 38.9% vs 20.8% (P<0.001 McNemar test); type 2 diabetes 19.4% vs 9.7% (P=0.016 McNemar test); dyslipidemia 58.3% vs 33.3% (P=0.001 McNemar test); and sleep apnea 11.1% vs 4.17% (P=0,125 McNemar test). A sub-analysis of patients treated for these comorbidities (n=33) has shown that, preoperatively, costs related to drug and continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) use were on average 1.26&z.€/patient/day, whereas postoperatively these costs were on average 0.53&z.€/patient/day (P=0.015 Paired sample t-test). Preoperatively, the median number of pills and insulin dose per patient per day was 2 and 60, while postoperatively these numbers decreased to 1 and 43, respectively (P=0.002; P=0.043 Wilcoxon test). These patients exhibited an improvement in their comorbidities which, remaining stable, could reimburse the costs of the bariatric surgery in 23 years.

Conclusion: Bariatric surgery can decrease medication requirements, resulting in significant cost savings to the National Health Service. This surgery is pricey, but the decrease of expenditures in prescription costs may allow a reimbursement of the investment, and this is more evident in patients with more associated comorbidities.

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