Objective: To explore whether bariatric surgery can decrease the incidence of obesity-related tumors in obesity patients.
Methods: Relevant studies comparing the incidence of obesity-related tumors in obesity patients between bariatric surgery and non- bariatric surgery were identified by search of PubMed, Medline, EBSCO, High Wire Press, OVID, EMbase, China hownet (CNKI) and Wanfang databases since the self-built database. In strict accordance with the standard after the screening, literature quality and extracted data were evaluated. Review manager 5.2 software was used to perform meta-analysis and sensitivity analysis. Inverted funnel chart was used to investigate the publication bias.
Results: Five articles including 108 954 patients were enrolled in the analysis. Among them, 26 218 cases were bariatric surgery group, and 82 736 cases of non-surgical weight loss were the control group. Meta analysis showed that bariatric surgery could obviously decrease the incidence of postoperative obesity-related tumor(RR=0.60, 95% CI:0.45-0.80, P=0.0005). Subgroup analysis showed that cancer risk difference of obesity-related tumor in male patients was not significant between two group, while the postoperative incidence of obesity-related tumor of female patients in bariatric surgery group was significantly lower compared to those female patients in control group(RR=0.68, 95% CI:0.61-0.77, P<0.01). During follow-up of 1 to 10 years, the incidence of obesity-related tumor in bariatric surgery group was significantly lower than that in control group(P<0.05). When follow-up was more than 10 years, the incidence of obesity-related tumors was similar between two groups(P=0.70).
Conclusion: Bariatric surgery can decrease the overall risk of obesity-related cancer, especially for female patients, but with the prolongation of time, such effect of bariatric surgery is not obvious.