학술논문

Clinical Utility of Intraoperative Parathyroid Hormone Measurement in Children and Adolescents Undergoing Total Thyroidectomy
Document Type
article
Source
Frontiers in Endocrinology, Vol 10 (2019)
Subject
parathyroid hormone
pediatric
pediatric thyroidectomy
intraoperative PTH
hypocalcemia
recovery time
Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology
RC648-665
Language
English
ISSN
1664-2392
Abstract
Background: Hypoparathyroidism is one of the most common complications for patients undergoing total thyroidectomy. Our study's primary objective was to assess if intraoperative PTH levels correlate with parathyroid gland function recovery time in pediatric patients following total thyroidectomy.Methods: Retrospective review of pediatric patients who underwent thyroid surgery at CHOP for demographics and laboratory test values (calcium, phosphorus, and parathyroid hormone). We defined Time of Recovery (TOR) as the time difference from first intra-operative parathyroid hormone level (ioPTH) timepoint until normalization of PTH (> 10 pg/mL) post-thyroidectomy. Calcium and vitamin D supplements were weaned following normalization of calcium and phosphorous levels postoperatively. Patients were excluded if they lacked three intraoperative PTH timepoints or were missing postoperative follow-up PTH data.Results: 65 patients (54 female), median age 15 (range 5–23 years), underwent thyroid surgery and met study inclusion criteria. The correlations of 2nd and 3rd ioPTHs with TOR were statistically significant (p < 0.05): the lower the ioPTH, the greater the recovery time. Stratifying patients into high-risk (2nd ioPTH ≤ 10 pg/mL), moderate-risk (2nd ioPTH between 10 and 20 pg/mL), and low-risk (2nd ioPTH ≥ 20 pg/mL) tertiles, the TOR decreased by orders of magnitudes from an average of 43.13 ± 76.00 to 6.10 ± 17.44 to 1.85 ± 6.20 days. These differences were statistically significant (p < 0.05).Conclusions: Our study results confirm the usefulness of intraoperative PTH levels to predict pediatric patient recovery post-surgery and provides useful anticipatory guidance to optimize timing and frequency of postoperative laboratory surveillance.