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Does bypass of the proximal small intestine impact food intake, preference, and taste function in humans?: an experimental medicine study using the duodenal-jejunal bypass liner

Does bypass of the proximal small intestine impact food intake, preference, and taste function in humans?: an experimental medicine study using the duodenal-jejunal bypass liner
Does bypass of the proximal small intestine impact food intake, preference, and taste function in humans?: an experimental medicine study using the duodenal-jejunal bypass liner

The duodenal-jejunal bypass liner (Endobarrier) is an endoscopic treatment for obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). It creates exclusion of the proximal small intestine similar to that after Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RYGB) surgery. The objective of this study was to employ a reductionist approach to determine whether bypass of the proximal intestine is the component conferring the effects of RYGB on food intake and sweet taste preference using the Endobarrier as a research tool. A nested mechanistic study within a large randomised controlled trial compared the impact of lifestyle modification with vs. without Endobarrier insertion in patients with obesity and T2DM. Forty-seven participants were randomised and assessed at several timepoints using direct and indirect assessments of food intake, food preference and taste function. Patients within the Endobarrier group lost numerically more weight compared to the control group. Using food diaries, our results demonstrated similar reductions of food intake in both groups. There were no significant differences in food preference and sensory, appetitive reward, or consummatory reward domain of sweet taste function between groups or changes within groups. In conclusion, the superior weight loss seen in patients with obesity and T2DM who underwent the Endobarrier insertion was not due to a reduction in energy intake or change in food preferences.

Biomedical Research, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Eating, Humans, Intestine, Small, Obesity/surgery, Taste
2072-6643
Aldhwayan, Madhawi M.
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Al-Najim, Werd
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Ruban, Aruchuna
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Glaysher, Michael Alan
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Johnson, Brett
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Chhina, Navpreet
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Dimitriadis, Georgios K
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Prechtl, Christina Gabriele
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Johnson, Nicholas A.
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Byrne, James Patrick
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Goldstone, Anthony Peter
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Teare, Julian P.
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Le Roux, Carel W.
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Miras, Alexander Dimitri
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Byrne, James
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Aldhwayan, Madhawi M.
e6c33077-8262-4660-993a-bf804905e9ae
Al-Najim, Werd
75cc72ed-14e0-4754-9349-788a2080448d
Ruban, Aruchuna
491af67b-a027-4017-8aa5-fd2f0b91dd97
Glaysher, Michael Alan
965e02e5-5f16-4173-a507-2423fce132ad
Johnson, Brett
8d9f887e-64de-4048-8afe-1b812f5041ba
Chhina, Navpreet
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Dimitriadis, Georgios K
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Prechtl, Christina Gabriele
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Johnson, Nicholas A.
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Byrne, James Patrick
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Goldstone, Anthony Peter
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Teare, Julian P.
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Le Roux, Carel W.
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Miras, Alexander Dimitri
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Byrne, James
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Aldhwayan, Madhawi M., Al-Najim, Werd, Ruban, Aruchuna, Glaysher, Michael Alan, Johnson, Brett, Chhina, Navpreet, Dimitriadis, Georgios K, Prechtl, Christina Gabriele, Johnson, Nicholas A., Byrne, James Patrick, Goldstone, Anthony Peter, Teare, Julian P., Le Roux, Carel W., Miras, Alexander Dimitri and Byrne, James (2022) Does bypass of the proximal small intestine impact food intake, preference, and taste function in humans?: an experimental medicine study using the duodenal-jejunal bypass liner. Nutrients, 14 (10), [2141]. (doi:10.3390/nu14102141).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The duodenal-jejunal bypass liner (Endobarrier) is an endoscopic treatment for obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). It creates exclusion of the proximal small intestine similar to that after Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RYGB) surgery. The objective of this study was to employ a reductionist approach to determine whether bypass of the proximal intestine is the component conferring the effects of RYGB on food intake and sweet taste preference using the Endobarrier as a research tool. A nested mechanistic study within a large randomised controlled trial compared the impact of lifestyle modification with vs. without Endobarrier insertion in patients with obesity and T2DM. Forty-seven participants were randomised and assessed at several timepoints using direct and indirect assessments of food intake, food preference and taste function. Patients within the Endobarrier group lost numerically more weight compared to the control group. Using food diaries, our results demonstrated similar reductions of food intake in both groups. There were no significant differences in food preference and sensory, appetitive reward, or consummatory reward domain of sweet taste function between groups or changes within groups. In conclusion, the superior weight loss seen in patients with obesity and T2DM who underwent the Endobarrier insertion was not due to a reduction in energy intake or change in food preferences.

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Accepted/In Press date: 16 May 2022
Published date: 20 May 2022
Keywords: Biomedical Research, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Eating, Humans, Intestine, Small, Obesity/surgery, Taste

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 474404
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474404
ISSN: 2072-6643
PURE UUID: ef94cf91-64a1-4254-8587-f2893b3c3c26

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Date deposited: 21 Feb 2023 17:50
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 00:13

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Contributors

Author: Madhawi M. Aldhwayan
Author: Werd Al-Najim
Author: Aruchuna Ruban
Author: Michael Alan Glaysher
Author: Brett Johnson
Author: Navpreet Chhina
Author: Georgios K Dimitriadis
Author: Christina Gabriele Prechtl
Author: Nicholas A. Johnson
Author: James Patrick Byrne
Author: Anthony Peter Goldstone
Author: Julian P. Teare
Author: Carel W. Le Roux
Author: Alexander Dimitri Miras
Author: James Byrne

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