Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4278471 The American Journal of Surgery 2015 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundOur aim was to determine whether chronic renal insufficiency (CRI) impacted intraoperative parathyroid hormone (ioPTH) monitoring during parathyroidectomy. We hypothesized that ioPTH monitoring in patients with CRI would show slower decline, but would still accurately predict cure.MethodsA retrospective review was conducted of patients with primary hyperparathyroidism who underwent curative single adenoma parathyroidectomy. The percentage of patients reaching 50% decline of ioPTH was compared between groups stratified by renal function.ResultsBetween 2000 and 2013, 950 patients met inclusion criteria. At 5 minutes, 66% of patients with CRI met curative criteria versus 77% of normal renal function patients (P = .001). At 10 minutes, 89% vs 92% met criteria (P = .073), and by 15 minutes, the gap narrowed to 95% vs 97% (P = .142), respectively.ConclusionsDespite CRI patients with primary hyperparathyroidism having slower ioPTH decline after curative parathyroidectomy, 95% met ioPTH criteria by 15 minutes. Standard ioPTH criteria can be used with CRI patients.

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