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Be prepared to adjust dosing of psychotropics after bariatric surgery

Approximately 113,000 bariatric sur­geries were performed in the United States in 2010; as many as 80% of persons seeking weight loss surgery have a history of a psychiatric disorder.1,2

Bariatric surgery can be “restrictive” (limiting food intake) or “malabsorptive” (limiting food absorption). Both types of procedures can cause significant changes in pharmacokinetics. Bariatric surgery patients who take a psychotropic are at risk of tox­icity or relapse of their psychiatric illness because of inappropriate formulations— immediate-release vs sustained-release—or incomplete absorption of medications. You need to anticipate potential pharmacokinetic alterations after bariatric surgery and make appropriate changes to the patient’s medica­tion regimen.


Pharmacokinetic concerns

Roux-en-Y surgery is a malabsorptive procedure that causes food to bypass the stomach, duodenum, and a variable length of jejunum. Secondary to bypass, iron defi­ciency anemia is a common nutritional complication.

Other changes that affect the pharma­cokinetics of psychotropics after bariatric surgery include:
   • an increase in percentage of lean body mass as weight loss occurs
   • a decrease in glomerular filtration rate as kidney size decreases with postsur­gical weight reduction
   • reversal of obesity-associated fatty liver and cirrhotic changes.

With time, intestinal adaptation occurs to compensate for the reduced length of the intestinal tract; this adaptation pro­duces mucosal hypertrophy and increases absorptive capacity.3


Medications to taper or avoid

The absorption and bioavailability of a medication depend on its dissolv­ability; the pH of the medium; surface area for absorption; and GI blood flow.4 Medications that have a long absorp­tive phase—namely, sustained-release, extended-release, long-acting, and enteric-coated formulations—show compromised dissolvability and absorption and reduced efficacy after bariatric surgery.

Avoid slow-release formulations, includ­ing ion-exchange resins with a semiper­meable membrane and those with slowly dissolving characteristics; substitute an immediate-release formulation.

Medications that require acidic pH are incompletely absorbed because gastric exposure is reduced.

Lipophilic medications depend on bile availability; impaired enterohepatic circulation because of reduced intestinal absorptive surface causes loss of bile and, therefore, impaired absorption of lipo­philic medications.

Medications that are poorly intrinsi­cally absorbed and undergo entero­hepatic circulation are likely to be underabsorbed after a malabsorptive bar­iatric procedure.

Lamotrigine, olanzapine, and quetiap­ine may show decreased efficacy because of possible reduced absorption.

The lithium level, which is influenced by volume of distribution, can become toxic postoperatively; consider measuring the serum lithium level.

Disclosures
The authors report no financial relationship with any company whose products are mentioned in this article or with manufacturers of competing products.

References


1. Livingston EH. The incidence of bariatric surgery has plateaued in the U.S. Am J Surg. 2010;200(3):378-385.
2. Jones WR, Morgan JF. Obesity surgery. Psychiatric needs must be considered. BMJ. 2010;341:c5298. doi: 10.1136/bmj.c5298.
3. Padwal R, Brocks D, Sharma AM. A systematic review of drug absorption following bariatric surgery and its theoretical implications. Obes Rev. 2010;11(1):41-50.
4. Lizer MH, Papageorgeon H, Glembot TM. Nutritional and pharmacologic challenges in the bariatric surgery patient. Obes Surg. 2010;20(12):1654-1659.

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Shailesh Jain, MD, MPH, ABDA
Associate Professor and Regional Chair
Department of Psychiatry

Rakesh Jain, MD, MPH
Clinical Professor

Texas Tech Health Science Center
Permian Basin, Odessa, Texas

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bariatric surgery, weight loss, weight management, psychotropics, lithium
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Shailesh Jain, MD, MPH, ABDA
Associate Professor and Regional Chair
Department of Psychiatry

Rakesh Jain, MD, MPH
Clinical Professor

Texas Tech Health Science Center
Permian Basin, Odessa, Texas

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Shailesh Jain, MD, MPH, ABDA
Associate Professor and Regional Chair
Department of Psychiatry

Rakesh Jain, MD, MPH
Clinical Professor

Texas Tech Health Science Center
Permian Basin, Odessa, Texas

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Approximately 113,000 bariatric sur­geries were performed in the United States in 2010; as many as 80% of persons seeking weight loss surgery have a history of a psychiatric disorder.1,2

Bariatric surgery can be “restrictive” (limiting food intake) or “malabsorptive” (limiting food absorption). Both types of procedures can cause significant changes in pharmacokinetics. Bariatric surgery patients who take a psychotropic are at risk of tox­icity or relapse of their psychiatric illness because of inappropriate formulations— immediate-release vs sustained-release—or incomplete absorption of medications. You need to anticipate potential pharmacokinetic alterations after bariatric surgery and make appropriate changes to the patient’s medica­tion regimen.


Pharmacokinetic concerns

Roux-en-Y surgery is a malabsorptive procedure that causes food to bypass the stomach, duodenum, and a variable length of jejunum. Secondary to bypass, iron defi­ciency anemia is a common nutritional complication.

Other changes that affect the pharma­cokinetics of psychotropics after bariatric surgery include:
   • an increase in percentage of lean body mass as weight loss occurs
   • a decrease in glomerular filtration rate as kidney size decreases with postsur­gical weight reduction
   • reversal of obesity-associated fatty liver and cirrhotic changes.

With time, intestinal adaptation occurs to compensate for the reduced length of the intestinal tract; this adaptation pro­duces mucosal hypertrophy and increases absorptive capacity.3


Medications to taper or avoid

The absorption and bioavailability of a medication depend on its dissolv­ability; the pH of the medium; surface area for absorption; and GI blood flow.4 Medications that have a long absorp­tive phase—namely, sustained-release, extended-release, long-acting, and enteric-coated formulations—show compromised dissolvability and absorption and reduced efficacy after bariatric surgery.

Avoid slow-release formulations, includ­ing ion-exchange resins with a semiper­meable membrane and those with slowly dissolving characteristics; substitute an immediate-release formulation.

Medications that require acidic pH are incompletely absorbed because gastric exposure is reduced.

Lipophilic medications depend on bile availability; impaired enterohepatic circulation because of reduced intestinal absorptive surface causes loss of bile and, therefore, impaired absorption of lipo­philic medications.

Medications that are poorly intrinsi­cally absorbed and undergo entero­hepatic circulation are likely to be underabsorbed after a malabsorptive bar­iatric procedure.

Lamotrigine, olanzapine, and quetiap­ine may show decreased efficacy because of possible reduced absorption.

The lithium level, which is influenced by volume of distribution, can become toxic postoperatively; consider measuring the serum lithium level.

Disclosures
The authors report no financial relationship with any company whose products are mentioned in this article or with manufacturers of competing products.

Approximately 113,000 bariatric sur­geries were performed in the United States in 2010; as many as 80% of persons seeking weight loss surgery have a history of a psychiatric disorder.1,2

Bariatric surgery can be “restrictive” (limiting food intake) or “malabsorptive” (limiting food absorption). Both types of procedures can cause significant changes in pharmacokinetics. Bariatric surgery patients who take a psychotropic are at risk of tox­icity or relapse of their psychiatric illness because of inappropriate formulations— immediate-release vs sustained-release—or incomplete absorption of medications. You need to anticipate potential pharmacokinetic alterations after bariatric surgery and make appropriate changes to the patient’s medica­tion regimen.


Pharmacokinetic concerns

Roux-en-Y surgery is a malabsorptive procedure that causes food to bypass the stomach, duodenum, and a variable length of jejunum. Secondary to bypass, iron defi­ciency anemia is a common nutritional complication.

Other changes that affect the pharma­cokinetics of psychotropics after bariatric surgery include:
   • an increase in percentage of lean body mass as weight loss occurs
   • a decrease in glomerular filtration rate as kidney size decreases with postsur­gical weight reduction
   • reversal of obesity-associated fatty liver and cirrhotic changes.

With time, intestinal adaptation occurs to compensate for the reduced length of the intestinal tract; this adaptation pro­duces mucosal hypertrophy and increases absorptive capacity.3


Medications to taper or avoid

The absorption and bioavailability of a medication depend on its dissolv­ability; the pH of the medium; surface area for absorption; and GI blood flow.4 Medications that have a long absorp­tive phase—namely, sustained-release, extended-release, long-acting, and enteric-coated formulations—show compromised dissolvability and absorption and reduced efficacy after bariatric surgery.

Avoid slow-release formulations, includ­ing ion-exchange resins with a semiper­meable membrane and those with slowly dissolving characteristics; substitute an immediate-release formulation.

Medications that require acidic pH are incompletely absorbed because gastric exposure is reduced.

Lipophilic medications depend on bile availability; impaired enterohepatic circulation because of reduced intestinal absorptive surface causes loss of bile and, therefore, impaired absorption of lipo­philic medications.

Medications that are poorly intrinsi­cally absorbed and undergo entero­hepatic circulation are likely to be underabsorbed after a malabsorptive bar­iatric procedure.

Lamotrigine, olanzapine, and quetiap­ine may show decreased efficacy because of possible reduced absorption.

The lithium level, which is influenced by volume of distribution, can become toxic postoperatively; consider measuring the serum lithium level.

Disclosures
The authors report no financial relationship with any company whose products are mentioned in this article or with manufacturers of competing products.

References


1. Livingston EH. The incidence of bariatric surgery has plateaued in the U.S. Am J Surg. 2010;200(3):378-385.
2. Jones WR, Morgan JF. Obesity surgery. Psychiatric needs must be considered. BMJ. 2010;341:c5298. doi: 10.1136/bmj.c5298.
3. Padwal R, Brocks D, Sharma AM. A systematic review of drug absorption following bariatric surgery and its theoretical implications. Obes Rev. 2010;11(1):41-50.
4. Lizer MH, Papageorgeon H, Glembot TM. Nutritional and pharmacologic challenges in the bariatric surgery patient. Obes Surg. 2010;20(12):1654-1659.

References


1. Livingston EH. The incidence of bariatric surgery has plateaued in the U.S. Am J Surg. 2010;200(3):378-385.
2. Jones WR, Morgan JF. Obesity surgery. Psychiatric needs must be considered. BMJ. 2010;341:c5298. doi: 10.1136/bmj.c5298.
3. Padwal R, Brocks D, Sharma AM. A systematic review of drug absorption following bariatric surgery and its theoretical implications. Obes Rev. 2010;11(1):41-50.
4. Lizer MH, Papageorgeon H, Glembot TM. Nutritional and pharmacologic challenges in the bariatric surgery patient. Obes Surg. 2010;20(12):1654-1659.

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Be prepared to adjust dosing of psychotropics after bariatric surgery
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