Absorption of medicines following bariatric surgery
- November 22, 2024
In Aotearoa New Zealand 1 in 3 adults (≥ 15 years) are obese (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2).1 Around 2000 bariatric procedures are performed each year; approximately half are restrictive, and half are restrictive-malabsorptive.2 Restrictive procedures e.g. gastric sleeve (GS), reduce the size of the stomach. Restrictive-malabsorptive procedures e.g. Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB), reduce the size of the stomach and bypass areas of the gastrointestinal tract such as the duodenum, jejunum, and some of the small intestine.
Following bariatric surgery physiologic and pharmacokinetic changes may affect medicines use and absorption. Most oral medicines will be adequately absorbed even when sections of the small intestine are bypassed. In some cases, switching formulations from solid to liquid or from sustained to immediate release may improve absorption or using non-oral routes of administration may be necessary e.g. sublingual, buccal, rectal. Clinical symptoms, biomarkers and drug concentrations can be monitored to assess effects of medicines. Reduced absorption post-surgery may recover over time. Recommendations for some medicines to help guide oral dosing 3–7 |
Medicines | Recommendations |
Anticoagulants
Antiplatelets |
Increase anticoagulant monitoring to guide dosing post-surgery.
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Antidepressants | Routine dose adjustment is not recommended but some pharmacokinetic studies report lower concentrations and relapse after RYGB.
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Antihypertensives | Blood pressure treatment requirements can change after bariatric surgery. Monitor blood pressure and adjust dose accordingly. Be aware of diuretics and dehydration. |
Blood-glucose lowering therapy | Diabetes treatment requirements usually decrease after bariatric surgery. Monitor blood glucose and adjust dose accordingly. |
Bisphosphonates | IV route preferred (e.g. zoledronic acid). Oral alendronic acid has increased risk of adverse gastrointestinal effects and low oral bioavailability (<1%). |
Digoxin | Monitor concentrations. Unchanged AUC and Cmax for digoxin (n = 12) pre- and post-RYGB (3 and 12 months).11 |
Immunosuppressants | Monitor concentrations.
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Levothyroxine | Monitor thyroid function tests (TFTs) and adjust dose accordingly. Observational studies suggest most patients will need either no change or a reduction in levothyroxine doses.4 |
Lithium | Monitor concentrations. |
NSAIDs | Avoid due to increased risk of adverse gastrointestinal effects. |
Omeprazole | No dose adjustment required. Unchanged AUC for omeprazole (n = 36) in patients with prior RYGB (≥ 1 year) compared to healthy controls. The Tmax was shorter (1 versus 4 hours).13 |
Oral Contraceptives | Oral contraceptives may not be reliable after bariatric surgery. Chronic diarrhoea may be present. Consider using non-oral options e.g. depot medroxyprogesterone.14 |
Statins | No dose adjustment. Monitor lipids, absolute cardiovascular risk, adverse effects e.g. muscle weakness/pain. |
Tamoxifen Aromatase inhibitors |
Post-RYGB an aromatase inhibitor or tamoxifen 40 mg daily (double dose) is recommended. Subtherapeutic concentrations with tamoxifen 20 mg daily (5 out of 6 cases) and therapeutic concentrations with 40 mg daily (4 out of 6 cases) post-RYGB. Anastrozole and letrozole (n = 4) adequately absorbed post-RYGB.15 |
AUC = area under the curve, Cmax = maximum concentration, Tmax = time to maximum concentration.
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Key points1. Manage each patient on a case-by-case basis. There is large inter- and intraindividual variability. |