Team also found 29 per cent lower risk of wound re-opening within six months of surgery, and about 56 per cent lower risk of haematoma
Taking the ‘GLP-1 receptor agonist’ class
of anti-obesity drugs is related with lower rates of post-surgery complications
in people with diabetes, according to a study.
GLP-1 receptor agonist, or GLP-1 RA, drugs help treat diabetes by
weight loss, improving blood glucose levels and increasing insulin sensitivity,
low levels of which are a risk factor for diabetes.
Researchers, led by those at Weill Cornell Medicine, the US,
analysed hospital records of over 74,400 surgical procedures performed from
February 2020 to July 2023 on nearly 22,000 patients with diabetes.
Patients taking the anti-obesity drugs had
about 12 per cent lower risk of hospital re-admission within a month of
surgery, compared to those not taking these medications, according to the
findings published in the journal ‘Annals of Surgery’.
The team also found 29 per cent lower risk of wound re-opening
within six months of surgery, and about 56 per cent lower risk of
haematoma—when blood collects in a tissue due to an injury at the surgery
site—in this group of patients.
“These findings from such a large number
of patients and procedures suggest that taking these drugs shouldn’t worsen
overall post-surgical complications, and may even reduce the likelihood of some
of them,” senior author Dr Jason Spector, chief of the division of plastic and
reconstructive surgery and a professor of surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine,
said.
For the analysis, the researchers recorded the rates of 30-day
hospital re-admissions and post-surgical adverse events during the follow-up
period of at least six months. The rates were compared among patients with and
without active GLP-1 RA drug prescriptions.
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