Background: We studied body composition by three-dimensional photonic scanning (3DPS) and metabolic biomarkers in a large ethnically diverse cohort of individuals with severe obesity before and after weight loss by Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) or adjustable gastric banding (AGB) surgery.
Materials and methods: Male and female participants (n = 95) underwent 3DPS testing in the weeks preceding bariatric surgery (baseline), and 1 year after either RYGB (n = 34) or AGB (n = 9).
Results: Principal component analysis showed that A1C and HDL cholesterol clustered with waist-to-hip ratio (WHR). Both RYGB and AGB surgeries led to similar improvements in A1C and lipids after 1 year. RYGB led to greater decreases in body weight, and in most anthropometric measures, compared with AGB at 1 year. However, after accounting for weight loss differences, RYGB and AGB groups did not differ in regional decreases in circumferences or volumes; the exception was a greater reduction in lean mass in RYGB compared with AGB.
Conclusion: Distribution of weight loss, assessed by 3DPS, did not differ between RYGB and AGB, but surgery type predicted change in lean mass at 1 year.
Keywords: Body composition; Dyslipidemia; Gastric band; Gastric bypass; Three-dimensional photonic scanning (3DPS); Type 2 diabetes mellitus.