Summary: In this 93-patient randomized controlled trial, adding a 6-month structured strength or endurance programme after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass did NOT improve the primary endpoint of 2-hour OGTT glucose (-0.29 mmol/L, 95% CI -1.22 to 0.63, p=0.54). Pooled exercise produced modestly greater total weight loss (-2.5 kg, p=0.023) and fat-mass loss (-3.0 kg, p=0.0037), with no benefit for lipids, inflammation, or quality of life beyond surgery alone.
PICO Summary
| Element | Detail |
|---|---|
| Population | 93 adults randomized after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass; 28% with type 2 diabetes (8.5% insulin-dependent); single-centre RCT, Germany. |
| Intervention | 6-month standardized exercise started within 28 days post-op: strength training (n=30) or endurance training (n=31), analysed together as a pooled intervention group. |
| Comparison | Control group with no added exercise programme (post-surgery standard care), n=32. |
| Outcome | Primary (negative): 2-hour OGTT glucose, pooled exercise vs control -0.29 mmol/L (95% CI -1.22 to 0.63, p=0.54). Secondary: total weight -2.5 kg (95% CI -4.7 to -0.4, p=0.023) and fat mass -3.0 kg (95% CI -5.0 to -1.0, p=0.0037) lower with exercise. Fat-free mass fell -4.2 kg with no between-group difference. No significant differences in lipids, inflammation, or quality of life. |
Exercise after gastric bypass
RCT · post-RYGB · 6 months
Structured exercise after gastric bypass did not improve 2-hour glucose, lipids, inflammation, or quality of life. It added only modest extra weight and fat-mass loss.
Expert Commentary
The verdict here is honest and largely negative on the metabolic question that mattered most. The prespecified primary endpoint, 2-hour glucose after an oral tolerance test, was unchanged by structured exercise, and lipids, inflammatory markers, and quality of life were likewise unmoved beyond what the bypass itself delivered. What exercise did add was modest: roughly 2.5 kg more total weight loss and 3 kg more fat-mass loss over six months, with strength and endurance training pooled because neither separated convincingly. The most important caveat is that an exercise trial cannot be blinded, so the open-label design and self-reported adherence leave the weight findings open to behavioural confounding, and the sample of 93 was small for the metabolic comparisons it was powered to answer. Can I use this with my patients? Cautiously yes, for a post-bypass patient who wants to protect against fat regain and is willing to train, but I would not promise better glucose or lipid control as the payoff. The retained fat-free-mass loss is a reminder that resistance work alone did not prevent lean-mass decline here. I would like to see a larger, longer trial that targets patients at highest metabolic risk and tracks durability past six months before exercise is framed as a metabolic, rather than a body-composition, intervention.
References
Lehmann S, Lange UG, Oberbach A, et al. The effect of 6 months of structured strength or endurance exercise program on weight loss after gastric bypass surgery in a randomized controlled trial. Langenbecks Arch Surg. 2025;410(1):194. doi:10.1007/s00423-025-03731-7
