SurgiCal Obesity Treatment Study (SCOTS): protocol for a national prospective cohort study of patients undergoing bariatric surgery in Scotland (original) (raw)

Logue, J. et al. (2015) SurgiCal Obesity Treatment Study (SCOTS): protocol for a national prospective cohort study of patients undergoing bariatric surgery in Scotland.BMJ Open, 5(5), e008106. (doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008106) (PMID:26002692) (PMCID:PMC4442215)

Abstract

Introduction The efficacy of bariatric surgery for large-scale, long-term weight loss is well established. However, many questions remain over the continual benefits and cost-effectiveness of that weight loss for overall health, particularly when accounting for potential complications and adverse events of surgery. Health research institutes in the UK and the USA have called for high-quality longitudinal cohort studies of patients undergoing bariatric surgery, assessing outcomes such as surgical complications, mortality, diabetes remission, microvascular complications, cardiovascular events, mental health, cost and healthcare use. Methods and analysis SurgiCal Obesity Treatment Study (SCOTS) is a national, prospective, observational, cohort study of patients undergoing primary bariatric surgical procedures in Scotland. This study aims to recruit 2000 patients and conduct a follow-up for 10 years postbariatric surgery using multiple data collection methods: surgeon-recorded data, electronic health record linkage, and patient-reported outcome measures. Outcomes measured will include: mortality, weight change, diabetes, surgical, cardiovascular, cancer, behavioural, reproductive/urological and nutritional variables. Healthcare utilisation and economic productivity will be collected to inform cost-effectiveness analysis. Ethics and dissemination The study has received a favourable ethical opinion from the West of Scotland Research Ethics committee. All publications arising from this cohort study will be published in open-access peer-reviewed journals. All SCOTS investigators (all members of the research team at every recruiting site) will have the ability to propose research suggestions and potential publications using SCOTS data; a publications committee will approve all requests for use of SCOTS data and propose writing committees and timelines. Lay-person summaries of all research findings will be published simultaneously on the SCOTS website (http://www.scotsurgeystudy.org.uk).

Item Type: Articles
Status: Published
Refereed: Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID: Lindsay, Dr Robert and Munro, Mrs Jane and Lean, Professor Michael and Sattar, Professor Naveed and Logue, Dr Jennifer and Stewart, Miss Sally and Ford, Professor Ian and Grieve, Dr Eleanor and Briggs, Professor Andrew
Authors: Logue, J., Stewart, S., Munro, J., Bruce, J., Grieve, E., Lean, M., Lindsay, R. S., Bruce, D., Ali, A., Briggs, A., Sattar, N., and Ford, I.
College/School: College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Health & Wellbeing > Robertson CentreCollege of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Health & Wellbeing > Health Economics and Health Technology AssessmentCollege of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Cardiovascular & Metabolic HealthCollege of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Health & Wellbeing > MRC/CSO SPHSUCollege of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Medicine, Dentistry & Nursing
Journal Name: BMJ Open
Publisher: BMJ Publishing Group
ISSN: 2044-6055
ISSN (Online): 2044-6055
Copyright Holders: Copyright © 2015 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
First Published: First published in BMJ Open 5(5):e008106
Publisher Policy: Reproduced under a Creative Commons License

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Funder and Project Information

1

SurgiCal Obesity Treatment Study (SCOTS)

Jennifer Logue

10/42/02

RI CARDIOVASCULAR & MEDICAL SCIENCES

Deposit and Record Details

ID Code: 107113
Depositing User: Miss Dawn Pike
Datestamp: 08 Jun 2015 11:51
Last Modified: 02 May 2025 06:06
Date of acceptance: 14 April 2015
Date of first online publication: 2015
Date Deposited: 15 December 2015