Operative Treatment of Tertiary Hyperparathyroidism
- 1 June 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Annals of Surgery
- Vol. 227 (6) , 878-886
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-199806000-00011
Abstract
Objective To review the experience with the operative treatment of tertiary hyperparathyroidism (TH) from a single renal transplant center. Summary Background Data Most patients with chronic renal failure show evidence of secondary hyperparathyroidism by the time maintenance hemodialysis begins. Persistent secondary hyperparathyroidism (i.e., TH) requiring surgical intervention is uncommon in the authors' experience. Methods Charts of patients who underwent parathyroidectomy for TH were reviewed retrospectively. Information obtained included demographics, laboratory data, symptoms, operative procedure (including morbidity and mortality rates), and pathology. Comparisons of demographic data and allograft survival were made between the transplant population as a whole and a matched cohort group of patients. Results Thirty-eight patients from 4344 renal transplant procedures during a 29-year period required parathyroidectomy for TH. All patients had hypercalcemia; 20 were asymptomatic and 18 had varying symptoms. Mean time from renal transplantation to parathyroidectomy was 997 ± 184 days, with a mean preoperative calcium level of 12.2 ± 0.14 mg/dl. Total parathyroidectomy with parathyroid autograft was performed in 26 of 34 primary procedures. There were no deaths. The operative morbidity rate was 6% (wound separation and vocal cord hemiparesis, one each). Pathology was reported in all patients and recently reviewed in 28 patients. Twenty-four had diffuse hyperplasia and nine had nodular hyperplasia; one had an adenoma. Parathyroid glands diagnosed as nodular hyperplasia were significantly larger by total mass than those with diffuse hyperplasia. Comparison of allograft survival between the study group and a matched cohort group of patients revealed no difference in long-term graft survival. Conclusions Operative intervention is recommended in patients with an asymptomatic increase in serum calcium to >12.0 mg/dl persisting for >1 year after the transplant, acute hypercalcemia (calcium >12.5 mg/dl) in the immediate posttransplant period, and symptomatic hypercalcemia.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- A REEVALUATION OF RISKS AND MANAGEMENTTransplantation, 1989
- TOTAL PARATHYROIDECTOMY FOR POSTTRANSPLANTATION HYPERPARATHYROIDISMTransplantation, 1985
- The Urological Complications of 1000 Renal TransplantsBritish Journal of Urology, 1981
- Treatment of Secondary Hyperparathyroidism in Patients with Chronic Renal Failure by Total Parathyroidectomy and Parathyroid AutograftAnnals of Surgery, 1981
- Hypercalcemia and Parathyroid Function after Renal TransplantationActa Medica Scandinavica, 1977
- Secondary Hyperparathyroidism in Human Kidney Transplant RecipientsNephron, 1976
- Subtotal Parathyroidectomy in Chronic Renal FailureAnnals of Surgery, 1971
- A generalized Wilcoxon test for comparing arbitrarily singly-censored samplesBiometrika, 1965
- Nonparametric Estimation from Incomplete ObservationsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1958
- STUDIES ON THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE PARATHYROID GLANDS. IV. RENAL COMPLICATIONS OF HYPERPARATHYROIDISMThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1934