Cardiac Abnormalities in Individuals Aged ≥ 50 Years with Severe Obesity Referred for Bariatric Surgery

Graphical Abstract Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11695-024-07422-y.

Michelle Lobeek and Aniek Peters contributed equally to this work.

Key points
• Bariatric surgery is increasingly performed in individuals with severe obesity.• Obese patients of ≥ 50 years without heart failure had profound cardiac dysfunction.• These abnormalities often meet with a diagnosis of heart failure.• These insights may help the optimal timing of bariatric surgery.
Extended author information available on the last page of the article disease.[3] It has been suggested that NT-proBNP also can have clinical relevance as a preoperative screening tool in patients aged ≥ 50 years referred for bariatric surgery.[4] While the number of individuals that is referred for bariatric surgery is increasing, [5] the prevalence of echocardiographic abnormalities in these obese patients remain under represented in the literature.Therefore, the present study investigates the echocardiographic characteristics of individuals aged ≥ 50 years with severe obesity and elevated NT-proBNP levels who were referred for bariatric surgery.In particular, we assess the presence of echocardiographic abnormalities related to HFpEF.
This study is an echocardiographic substudy of an earlier prospective study.[4] Consecutive patients who were referred to the Department of Bariatric Surgery of the Rijnstate Hospital (Arnhem, The Netherlands) between June 2019 and January 2020 were included.Patients aged ≥ 50 years, with NT-proBNP ≥ 125 pg/ml, without a history of HF, meeting the International Federation for the Surgery of Obesity and Metabolic Disorders criteria (i.e.body mass index (BMI) ≥ 35 kg/m 2 with an obesity-related co-morbidity or BMI ≥ 40 kg/m 2 ), and who underwent an echocardiogram due to elevated NT-proBNP levels were included.The study was approved by the Local Ethics Committee.Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in the study.All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards.
All echocardiographic analyses were performed according to recommendations of the American Society of Echocardiography and are described in detail in the Supplementary Material.[6] Recommended cutoff values for abnormality of each individual echocardiographic measure were used.[6] Patients were categorized based on their left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (LVEF) into: i) reduced (< 40%), ii) mildly reduced (40-49%), and iii) preserved (≥ 50%) LVEF.Patients with a preserved LVEF were further stratified according to the HFA-PEFF (Heart Failure Association -Pretest Assessment, Echocardiographic and Natriuretic Peptide Score, Functional Testing, Final Etiology) diagnostic algorithm and HFA-PEFF scores for each individual were subsequently calculated.[7].
In total, 61 patients were included.Mean age was 59 ± 5 years, 49 (80%) were female, mean BMI was 43 ± 6 kg/m 2 and median NT-proBNP was 222 [144-343] pg/ml.Forty-one patients (67%) had hypertension, 5 (8%) had coronary artery disease, 15 (21%) had a history of atrial fibrillation and 15 patients (25%) had type 2 diabetes.Table 1 depicts the echocardiography characteristics of the study population.26% of the patients had concentric LV remodelling with an increased relative wall thickness.Respectively 39% and 52% of patients had LV diastolic dysfunction, evidenced by a reduced septal and lateral e'.In total, 29% had an increased left atrial volume index, 52% had a reduced LV global longitudinal strain, 52% had an elevated E/e' and one patient (2%) had increased LV filling pressure with E/e' > 15.Three patients (5%) had a reduced LVEF, six patients (10%) had a mildly-reduced LVEF and 52 In summary, this study showed that a significant number of patients aged ≥ 50 years with severe obesity, who were free of HF, already had profound, cardiac dysfunction mostly related to concentric LV remodelling, LV diastolic dysfunction and reduced LV longitudinal strain.Moreover, this study demonstrated that 15% of the patients already met the HFA-PEFF score criteria, fulfilling the diagnosis of HFpEF.Since HFA-PEFF scores could not be calculated completely in all individuals, the number of patients with echocardiographic abnormalities complying with the diagnosis of HFpEF may even be underestimated in this study.Of note, this was a cross-sectional study without a control group and it only performed in individuals who were referred for bariatric surgery, which limits generalizability.Nevertheless, this study reveals clinically relevant functional and morphological echocardiographic abnormalities in a substantial number of patients aged ≥ 50 years with severe obesity who were referred for bariatric surgery, but without a history of clinical HF.Further study is needed to investigate whether these findings will have clinical implications regarding the optimal timing of bariatric surgery or in predicting early and late postoperative outcomes.

Table 1
Echocardiographic characteristics of the study population Data are presented as mean ± standard deviation, median [interquartile range] or numbers (percentages).GLS global longitudinal strain