The Bariatric Surgery Registry (BSR)

November 3, 2022 updated by: Assoc/Prof Wendy Brown, Monash University

Establishment of a Bariatric Surgery Clinical Quality Registry

Persons with obesity are more likely to suffer from many other serious health conditions and are more likely to die young. Lifestyle interventions have not been found to be an effective long-term solution for treating obesity. When usual weight loss measures are not successful, bariatric, or 'weight loss,' surgery may be considered. Bariatric surgery is performed to help people with obesity achieve weight loss which they can maintain. Weight loss following bariatric surgery leads to improvement in health and well-being, and patients have been shown to live longer. It is invasive surgery which has surgical risks and potential side effects, including death. Since people are having this surgery to improve their health, it is important that the surgery is performed with a minimum of side effects, otherwise it cannot be justified. Information is collected about the surgery, any complications after the surgery, weight at various time points, and if the patient has diabetes and how it is is treated. Patient details are needed to be able to identify patients on the registry and track their progress through data linkages. Participants have information about their bariatric surgery provided to the registry by their surgeon or hospital. They may also be contacted directly by the registry staff to see if they had any complications and if the surgery had any effect on their health (if they have diabetes), weight, and well-being. The Registry will hold their identifiable information as it aims to follow each patient for ten years after their first bariatric operation. By systematically collecting information on every procedure performed in Australia and New Zealand, the registry will help to identify when surgeons, hospitals or procedures not performing to the expected standard. A Bariatric Surgery Registry should also be able to demonstrate how effectively bariatric surgery results in weight loss and improved health (using diabetes as a marker of health) across the two countries.

Study Overview

Status

Recruiting

Conditions

Detailed Description

The Bariatric Surgery Registry (BSR) is a population based observational quality improvement study of patients with obesity undergoing bariatric surgery and collects identifiable data obtained from participants' medical records, the participants themselves and from surgeons or hospitals. When mature, the registry will collect data from all public and private hospitals in Australia and New Zealand that perform bariatric surgery (estimated to be around 152 sites in Australia and 12 in NZ). Contributing surgeons or public hospital clinics are required to make patients who will undergo bariatric procedures aware that information related to their procedure will be provided to the BSR. Surgeons and public hospital clinics are required to display a poster that advises their practice/clinic contributes to the Bariatric Surgery Registry and give all bariatric patients a registry information flyer. Upon the registry receiving patient demographic and procedure information from the surgeon or the hospital, bariatric patients are posted a Participant Fact Sheet (PFS) further advising that participation in the registry is voluntary and their decision not to participate in the registry or to participate and later opt out, will not affect their relationship with their treating surgeon or the hospital, and their surgeon will be unaware of their participation status. After the PFS are posted, bariatric patients have two weeks to contact the Registry staff via the free call telephone number to opt out. Their participation will be presumed if no contact is made within that period. There are three options for participation: full participation; partial opt out - data is included on the registry but registry staff will not contact the participant during the follow-up period; or, complete opt out - no clinical data is included on the registry. All participants retain the right to opt out at any time. For those who choose to opt out, their information is disposed of in accordance with the National Statement for Ethical Conduct in Human Research 2007 (2015). Data are provided using one of the following options: web browser with secure authorised entry using the Bariatric Surgery Registry Interface (BSR-i); paper based data forms securely faxed or posted; or, secure electronic record transfer from surgeons' or hospitals' electronic medical record. In New Zealand, data will only be collected through direct entry through the BSR-i. Completeness and accuracy of the eligible population captured by the Registry will be assessed using hospital International Classification of Disease 10-Australia Modified (ICD-10-AM) codes. Cross-checking with ICD-10-AM codes allows for complete data capture at each hospital site and provides data validation for each procedure submitted by the surgeon. Hospital Information Services (HIS) at each hospital site or of a private hospital group provide regular ICD-10-AM coding reports for bariatric procedures performed by surgeons who participate in the Registry. These reports are sent to the registry at regular intervals by the administering organising and will only contain data of contributing surgeons. The reports are sent to the registry using a secure file transfer platform (SFTP). In the case where the surgeon or hospital had not previously provided information of a bariatric patient, the reports will be the primary source of data. When ICD-10-AM coding is the primary source, surgeons are asked to complete the missing data elements not made available from the hospitals (e.g. device/stapling information, whether it is a primary or revision operation, height/ weight information and diabetes treatment). If the surgeons are providing the missing operation data with the ICD-10-AM report verification process, they will also be asked to provide their perioperative follow-up data at the same time to enable efficiency. Patients whose details are obtained from ICD-10-AM reports will be sent a PFS and the opt-out approach is followed. If the surgeons do not supply the missing data elements, registry staff will contact the patient to confirm whether the procedure was a primary or revision and to ascertain the participant's height, weight, diabetes status and treatment prior to surgery. If surgeons or public data collectors indicate they have not seen the participant for follow-up and are unable to provide post-operative data, registry staff will contact the participant for a brief phone call to collect the information related to the perioperative period and/or 12 month intervals after surgery. This call may also include the missing data elements about their procedure if the surgeon or data collector had not provided them. Five attempts will be made to contact the patient before they are allocated to "Lost to Follow-Up." A waiver of consent has been granted by 40 ethics committees for the time during the data acquisition process when patients' data may be held without providing them the opportunity to opt out. The waiver covers from the time when the surgeons and hospitals provide patients' information before the PFS is posted and two weeks have passed; and, from the time when the BSR receives the Health Information Services discharge coding (ICD-10-AM reports) and when patients are identified whose data was not provided by surgeons or hospitals until the PFS is posted and two weeks has passed. Further, a waiver of consent has been also granted by the same ethics committees in the event that the patient dies following bariatric surgery so as not to burden next of kin. Information related to a mortality is essential to determine if the death is likely to have been caused by the bariatric surgery. Data collected are defined in the BSR's data dictionary and governed by the Steering Committee with any changes managed through a data element variation process. The data elements collected include: Patient Identifiers-full name, address, date of birth, unit record (UR) number/hospital, Individual Healthcare Identifier (IHI) number when available, email address; Patient Demographic Information-Medicare, or Department of Veterans' Affairs (DVA) number, National Health Index number (NHI) in New Zealand, phone numbers, gender, and indigenous status/ethnicity; Procedural information-surgeon name, procedure date, procedure type, primary or planned/unplanned revision status, reason for revision, bariatric procedure prior to revision, procedure abandoned or not, length of hospital stay, mortality status and if death likely related to bariatric procedure; Clinical details: start weight (for primary patients only), day-of-surgery (DOS) weight, height, diabetes status and treatment, and whether there was a concurrent renal and liver transplant; Device or staple details: type, brand, model, port fixation method, and buttressing; Peri-operative (up to 90 days :post-surgery) outcome data: date patient examined for follow-up; defined adverse events (unplanned return to theatre, unplanned admission to an intensive care unit, unplanned re-admission to hospital, prolonged hospital stay and reason or complication that caused the adverse event); mortality status and if death likely related to bariatric procedure; Annual Outcome data (for primary patients only) up to 10 years after surgery: weight, diabetes status and treatment, re-operation and reason; mortality status and if death likely related to bariatric procedure; and, Participant Feedback For quality assurance purposes, and as a basis for the potential development of the SMS/Secure Portal platform as described above, participants will be given the opportunity to provide feedback on their experience with the Registry and to advise how the BSR could better support their journey as bariatric patients. Perioperative follow-up data refers to the period between 20 and 90 days post-surgery. Annual follow-up refers to the period between 9 months prior to anniversary or 3 months following. Participants are identified as "primary" if they are entered the Registry with their first bariatric procedure or as "legacy" if they are entered with a revision bariatric procedure. The Bariatric Surgery Registry data dictionary defines each of the items on which data is collected and provides information on how the required data is sourced and entered in the database. The dictionary consists of a contents page that groups data items according to data that is collected from same source and refers to a particular phase of patient's care. Data completeness and accuracy are optimized through in-built validation and completion checks in the registry database to minimize data entry error. These include data entry controlled by form logic and limited to feasible data; the use of built in edit checks to ensure data meet required formats and ranges; accuracy enhanced by the use of exhaustive drop down lists providing all possible answers to minimize free text entry where applicable; the use of hide and show mechanisms to guide data entry to required fields; use of explanatory texts to assist data entry; validation rules applied at the time of submission with alerts to assist with errors and missing data; and the use of a participant management system to list incomplete data and other actions required. Additional quality checks post data entry includes checks for duplicate data, missing data, and data consistency. Data quality and completeness are checked at a number of stages of the data management process. Errors in data quality, when identified, may be referred back to contributing surgeons or sites for review. Case ascertainment as well as both brief and comprehensive audit processes will be performed on site by Monash University registry staff (Australia only). Registry staff will perform regular remote audit checks to verify the accuracy of data received from surgeons. This will be done during the course of a follow-up phone call from the call centre or by registry staff directly contacting surgeons' rooms. In Australia, it is intended that the BSR will periodically link to other repositories, or datasets, of health information which can validate registry data. This is to verify critical quality data such as patient mortality, defined adverse events and other outcome measures are completely captured, minimising the risk of surgeons selectively choosing whom they enter on the BSR. Requests to link New Zealand BSR data to national data sets will be considered by the Steering Committee on a case by case basis. For data linkages in Australia and New Zealand, the necessary approvals from an ethics committee will be sought when required. All statistical analyses of this registry will be undertaken with the support of the Biostatistics unit at Monash University. Non-identifiable data for both Australia and New Zealand will be provided to an independent biostatistician employed by the Monash University, Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine by secure file transfer for review on at least a six monthly basis. Participants, hospitals and surgeons will not be identified in this dataset. The results will be provided to the Monash by the registry's Project Manager. Only non-clinical registry staff will have access to identifiable data. All data to be used in reports or publications are to be cleaned and verified prior to analysis. Routine, re-analysis of data will be undertaken by the Project Manager to ensure findings are reproducible. The governance of how the data activities are undertaken lies with the Steering Committee. The Terms of Reference of the BSR Steering Committee outline specific roles of the Steering Committee in relation to data as follows- monitor the registry's data quality management processes and timeliness of reporting; develop and monitor policies for access to data and responses to quality of care issues identified; review and advise on outputs from the registry; and review all research and data requests for identifiable data.

Study Type

Observational

Enrollment (Anticipated)

250000

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Contact

Study Contact Backup

Study Locations

    • Victoria
      • Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
        • Recruiting
        • Monash University

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

2 years to 95 years (Child, Adult, Older Adult)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Genders Eligible for Study

All

Sampling Method

Non-Probability Sample

Study Population

persons who undergo bariatric surgical procedures as treatment for obesity

Description

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Body Mass Index (BMI) >30 kg/m2

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Pregnant women

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Incidence of defined adverse events following bariatric surgery
Time Frame: Time of surgery to 90 days following surgery
Information is collecting regarding the occurrence of one or more defined adverse events following bariatric surgery. Defined adverse events collected are: unplanned readmission to hospital, unplanned admission to the intensive care unit, unplanned return to the operating theatre, prolonged length of stay in hospital, and death. The reason for any of the events is also collected. If death occurs, the cause of death is collected to determine the likelihood of the death being caused by the bariatric surgery.
Time of surgery to 90 days following surgery

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Mortality status following bariatric surgery
Time Frame: Time of surgery up to 10 years after surgery
Information is collected about each patient who has undergone bariatric surgery to ascertain mortality after the surgery and whether the cause of death was likely to be related to the patient having bariatric surgery.
Time of surgery up to 10 years after surgery
Effect of bariatric surgery on long term weight loss
Time Frame: 12 months to 10 years after surgery
Patient weight is collected on annual basis following a primary bariatric procedure to determine if weight loss is sustainable in the long term.
12 months to 10 years after surgery
Effectiveness of bariatric procedures
Time Frame: 12 months to 10 years after surgery
Information is collected as to whether a patient has subsequent bariatric procedures following the first surgery recorded by the registry.
12 months to 10 years after surgery
The effect of bariatric surgery on a patient's diabetes status
Time Frame: 12 months to 10 years after surgery
Information is collected at baseline as to whether or not a patient is identified as a diabetic and then on annual basis following surgery to see if the patient's diabetes status has changed.
12 months to 10 years after surgery
The effectiveness of bariatric surgery as treatment for diabetes
Time Frame: 12 months to 10 years after surgery
Information is collected at baseline as to how a patient identified as a diabetic is treated and then on annual basis following surgery to see if the patient still requires further treatment for diabetes and if treatment has changed from what was recorded at baseline.
12 months to 10 years after surgery

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Investigators

  • Study Chair: Ian Caterson, MBBS, Boden Institute

Publications and helpful links

The person responsible for entering information about the study voluntarily provides these publications. These may be about anything related to the study.

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start

January 1, 2012

Primary Completion (Anticipated)

December 1, 2025

Study Completion (Anticipated)

December 1, 2025

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

January 22, 2015

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

February 20, 2018

First Posted (Actual)

February 22, 2018

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (Actual)

November 8, 2022

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

November 3, 2022

Last Verified

November 1, 2022

More Information

Terms related to this study

Other Study ID Numbers

  • MonashU

This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.

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