Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4309942 Surgery 2007 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundIntraoperative parathyroid hormone (IOPTH) monitoring is well-established in operation for primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT). In diseases where total parathyroidectomy (tPx) is a treatment option its reliability to predict postoperative residual parathyroid hormone (PTH) remains in question.MethodsThirty-eight consecutive patients with tPx due to secondary autonomous renal (26 patients), familial (8 patients), or lithium-induced (4 patients) HPT were analyzed retrospectively for the relationship between IOPTH and postoperative PTH. Three concepts were tested to predict a postoperative PTH below the normal range: a mandatory intraoperative decline of PTH less than 50% and 90% of the baseline value as well as an intraoperative decline below a threshold of 100 pg/ml 10 minutes after tPx.ResultsThere was no significant correlation between IOPTH decline and postoperative PTH (R = .265; P = .108). In patients with a 4-gland resection (n = 34) the positive predictive value was 62.5% and the sensitivity was 90.9% for the ‘50% concept.’ The corresponding values were 68.8% and 50.0% for the ‘90% concept,’ and 81.8% and 81.8% for the ‘100 pg/ml concept.’ConclusionsThe decision for simultaneous autotransplantation after tPx can not be based on IOPTH monitoring, because the reliability in prediction of early postoperative PTH status is insufficient.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Surgery
Authors
, , , , , ,