Bariatric Surgery · Patient Guide

Sleeve & Bypass After 10 Years:
What the Data Really Shows

Sleeve gastrectomy and gastric bypass have helped millions — but long-term studies reveal important limitations. Here's what patients should know, and why newer procedures like SASJ are gaining ground.

Based on peer-reviewed literature  |  Updated March 2026

"Standard" Doesn't Always Mean "Best"

For years, sleeve gastrectomy (removing most of the stomach to create a small tube) and Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) (shrinking the stomach and rerouting the intestines) have been the two most common weight loss surgeries worldwide. Both produce real, meaningful results for many patients.

But as 10-year follow-up data have accumulated, a clearer picture has emerged: both procedures carry significant long-term downsides that don't always get the attention they deserve. Weight regain, severe acid reflux, intestinal complications, nutritional deficiencies, and the need for second surgeries are not rare outliers — they appear consistently across large, rigorous studies.

This page explains those limitations in plain terms, and introduces the next generation of procedures — OAGB, SASJ, and SASI — designed to deliver the benefits while reducing the long-term burden.


Sleeve Gastrectomy After 10 Years:
Three Problems Worth Knowing

The sleeve became the world's most popular bariatric operation before long-term data were available. Now that 10-year results exist, the picture is more concerning than early figures suggested.

32.3%
New acid reflux at 10+ years after sleeve
31%
Esophageal inflammation at 10 years (SLEEVEPASS trial)
19.2%
Patients needing a second surgery at 10+ years
~28%
Significant weight regain at 7+ years

🔴 Problem 1: Acid Reflux and Esophageal Damage

Turning the stomach into a narrow tube creates high pressure that pushes stomach acid upward. Over time, many sleeve patients develop severe, hard-to-treat acid reflux (heartburn) — and some develop a pre-cancerous condition called Barrett's esophagus.

The landmark SLEEVEPASS trial — the largest randomized study comparing sleeve to bypass with 10-year follow-up — found that esophageal inflammation was nearly five times more common after sleeve than after bypass (31% vs. 7%). And 21% of sleeve patients needed reoperation by year 10, most commonly to convert to a gastric bypass — specifically to treat uncontrolled reflux.

🟠 Problem 2: Weight Regain

The sleeve works purely by limiting stomach size. Without changing gut hormones, the effect can fade. At 10+ years, the average total weight loss was only 24.4%, and about 20% of patients regained enough weight to require revision surgery. Diabetes improvement was also modest — only 45.6% of diabetic patients achieved lasting remission.

🟠 Problem 3: The Second-Surgery Burden

When a sleeve fails — due to reflux, weight regain, or esophageal damage — the most common fix is converting to a gastric bypass. This means some patients end up going through the risks of surgery twice. Choosing the right procedure from the start could spare these patients from a second operation.

"Despite its growing success, there is ongoing debate about long-term results of sleeve gastrectomy — particularly regarding durable effectiveness and the risk of Barrett's esophagus from de novo reflux." — Vitiello et al., Obesity Surgery, 2023

Gastric Bypass: What the Brochure Doesn't Say

Gastric bypass is often called the "gold standard" because it produces greater weight loss and better diabetes outcomes than the sleeve. But its complexity comes with a distinct set of long-term risks that are sometimes underemphasized.

18.5%
Reoperation rate at 10 years (SLEEVEPASS trial)
3–5%
Estimated lifetime risk of intestinal herniation
Lifelong
Iron, B12, vitamin D, and calcium supplements required
2
Surgical connections needed vs. only 1 in SASJ/OAGB

🔴 Problem 1: Intestinal Herniation (Bowel Getting Trapped)

The way RYGB rearranges the bowel leaves several small gaps where a loop of intestine can slip through and become trapped — a condition called internal hernia. When this happens, the bowel can lose its blood supply quickly and require emergency surgery. It can occur years or even decades after the original operation, often with no warning signs. The cumulative lifetime risk — estimated at 3–5% — is clinically meaningful.

🟠 Problem 2: Lifelong Nutritional Deficiencies

Gastric bypass reroutes food away from the duodenum and upper small intestine — the main absorption site for iron, calcium, vitamin D, vitamin B12, and folate. Patients must take supplements for the rest of their lives and have regular blood tests. Those who don't keep up face anemia, bone loss, nerve damage, and other serious complications.

🟠 Problem 3: Ulcers, Leaks, and Narrowing at the Connections

Two surgical connections mean two potential sites for ulcers, leaks, and narrowing. Ulcers at the stomach-bowel connection occur in 1–16% of patients and can be difficult to treat. The portion of the original stomach left behind in RYGB also cannot be reached by a standard endoscope — a significant concern in East Asia, where stomach cancer rates are higher.

Outcome (10-year data) Sleeve Gastric Bypass (RYGB)
Average weight loss43.5% excess weight50.7% excess weight
Diabetes remission rate26%33%
High blood pressure improvement8%24%
Esophageal inflammation rate31%7%
Need for second surgery15.7%18.5%
Intestinal herniation riskLowMeaningful lifetime risk
Nutritional supplement needsModestLifelong, multiple types
Full stomach scope accessYes (no remnant)Remnant cannot be scoped

Source: SLEEVEPASS RCT, n=240, 10-year follow-up (JAMA Surgery, 2022).


A Better Balance: OAGB, SASJ, and SASI

The limitations of sleeve and bypass have driven surgeons to develop a new class of procedures. The core idea: shrink the stomach first, then add a single new connection to create two food pathways. This delivers the metabolic power of a bypass with just one surgical connection (versus two in RYGB), and avoids the reflux problem of the sleeve.

✅ OAGB — One Anastomosis Gastric Bypass

OAGB creates a long, narrow stomach pouch and connects it to a loop of small intestine with a single connection. It achieves weight loss comparable to or better than RYGB, takes less time to perform, and is now endorsed by the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (ASMBS). The theoretical concern about bile flowing into the stomach occurs in some patients but is generally manageable.

✅ SASJ — Single Anastomosis Sleeve Jejunal Bypass

Developed and refined in Taiwan, SASJ combines a sleeve gastrectomy with a single connection to the jejunum (the middle section of the small intestine). Food travels two routes — some goes the normal way through the duodenum, and some takes a shortcut — triggering powerful gut hormones that improve metabolism. The jejunal connection position is carefully chosen to preserve at least 350 cm of absorptive intestine, keeping nutritional risk low.

Key Evidence — Lin et al. (IJS, 2026)

A Taiwanese multi-center study of 1,479 patients (770 SASJ vs. 709 sleeve) found SASJ achieved significantly greater weight loss at 2 years (34.0% vs. 30.1% total weight loss, P < 0.001), with an 88.5% diabetes remission rate. Blood hemoglobin and protein levels stayed within normal range. The 30-day readmission rate was 1.0% — the same as sleeve.

SASJ also preserves access to the duodenum for scopes and bile duct procedures, eliminates the leftover stomach pouch (important for stomach cancer surveillance in Asia), and avoids the gaps that cause internal hernia in bypass — substantially reducing that risk.

🔵 SASI — Single Anastomosis Sleeve Ileal Bypass

SASI connects the lower sleeve to the ileum (the end section of the small intestine), creating an even stronger gut hormone response. It achieves powerful diabetes control — one study found complete diabetes resolution in all patients within 6 months. It is simpler than RYGB and preserves the natural stomach outlet and duodenal passage, with no blind-end bowel loop.

Important Note

SASI carries a higher malnutrition risk if the connection is placed too far down the intestine. Careful patient selection and close nutritional follow-up are essential. SASJ was developed in part to address this concern by moving the connection to a safer location in the jejunum.

What Does the Pooled Evidence Say?

A 2026 meta-analysis (Jin et al., Updates in Surgery) combined 20 comparative studies and found:

+3.5%
More total weight lost vs. sleeve at 1 year
6.9×
Higher acid reflux remission rate vs. sleeve
≈ RYGB
Weight loss and diabetes outcomes comparable to bypass

OAGB Advantages

  • One connection — simpler than RYGB
  • ASMBS-endorsed
  • Weight loss matches or beats RYGB
  • Reversible if needed

SASJ Advantages

  • Better 2-year weight loss than sleeve (34% vs. 30%)
  • 88.5% diabetes remission rate
  • Keeps duodenum accessible for scopes
  • No remnant stomach — oncologically safer in Asia
  • Lower internal hernia risk
  • Lower nutritional risk than SASI

SASI Advantages

  • Powerful diabetes remission via gut hormones
  • One connection — simpler than RYGB
  • Preserves natural stomach outlet
  • No blind-end bowel loop

The Best Surgery Is the One That's Right for You

Sleeve gastrectomy and gastric bypass remain effective procedures that have transformed the lives of millions. But the long-term evidence is equally clear: both carry significant trade-offs. The sleeve leads to reflux in a large proportion of patients. The bypass requires lifelong supplementation and carries a meaningful risk of bowel complications.

OAGB, SASJ, and SASI are not experimental novelties — they are backed by multi-center studies, systematic reviews, and randomized trial-level data. They offer a better overall package: durable weight loss, metabolic improvement, reflux control, nutritional safety, and a simpler surgical design.

There is no single right answer for every patient. The choice depends on your health profile, diabetes severity, reflux history, and personal preferences. We welcome you to schedule a consultation to discuss which option is best for you.


Cited Literature

  1. [1]Salminen P, et al. Effect of Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy vs Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass on Weight Loss, Comorbidities, and Reflux at 10 Years. JAMA Surgery. 2022;157(8):656–666.
  2. [2]Vitiello A, et al. Long-Term Results of Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy: a Review of Studies Reporting 10+ Years Outcomes. Obesity Surgery. 2023;33:3565–3570.
  3. [3]Brown R. Evaluating the Effectiveness and Long-term Outcomes of RYGB vs Gastric Sleeve in Obese and Diabetic Patients: Systematic Review. J Am Coll Surg. 2025;241(6):1148–1159.
  4. [4]Lin Y-H, et al. Two-year outcomes of single anastomosis sleeve jejunal bypass (SASJ) vs sleeve gastrectomy: a Taiwanese multi-center study. Int J Surg. 2026. doi:10.1097/JS9.0000000000004943
  5. [5]Grubnik VV, et al. Comparative analysis of sleeve gastrectomy with transit bipartition versus SASI in morbidly obese patients with T2DM. General Surgery. 2025;4(15):34–40.
  6. [6]Jin CC, et al. Efficacy and safety of single-anastomosis gastric bypass variants versus sleeve gastrectomy or RYGB: systematic review and meta-analysis. Updates in Surgery. 2026.

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