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1.
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Unplanned Reoperations, Emergency Department Visits and Hospital Readmission After Thyroidectomy.
Margolick, J, Chen, W, Wiseman, SM
Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association. 2018;(5):624-638
Abstract
BACKGROUND Unplanned reoperation, emergency department (ED) visits, and hospital readmission following thyroid operations usually arise due to complications and are a source of frustration for both surgeons and patients. With the aim of providing insight important for the development of patient quality care improvement initiatives, the primary objective of this review was to evaluate the available literature systematically in order to determine the contemporary rates of reoperation, readmission, and ED visits following thyroid operations. A secondary study objective was to determine if there were any practices that showed promise in reducing the occurrence of these undesirable postoperative events. METHODS This systematic review was conducted in accordance with the Preferred Reporting of Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses protocols. Twenty-two studies were included in the systematic review. Meta-analysis was performed to obtain the weighted-pooled summary estimates of rates of reoperations, ED visits, and unplanned hospital readmission. Jackknife sensitivity analyses were performed for each data set. Finally, in order to detect the risk of publication bias and the small-study effect, funnel plot analysis was performed. RESULTS The pooled rate estimate for reoperation was very low (0.6% [confidence interval (CI) 0.3-1.1%]). This was subject to publication bias because smaller studies tended to report lower rates of reoperation. The pooled rate of ED visits was 8.1% [CI 6.5-9.8%], while the pooled rate of hospital readmission from 19 studies was 2.7% [CI 2.1-3.4%]. Neck hematoma was the most common reason for reoperation, while postoperative hypocalcemia was the most common reason for hospital readmission. CONCLUSIONS ED visits and hospital readmission after thyroidectomy are common, and there are several practices that can reduce their occurrence. Routine postoperative calcium and vitamin D supplementation may reduce rates of postoperative hypocalcemia, and avoiding postoperative hypertension may decrease the risk of neck hematoma development and the need for reoperation. Older age, thyroid cancer, dependent functional status, higher ASA score, diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, steroid use, hemodialysis, and recent weight loss increase the risk of hospital readmission after thyroid surgery. By further identifying risk factors for reoperation, ED visits, and readmission, this review may assist practitioners in optimizing perioperative care and therefore reducing patient morbidity and mortality after thyroid operations.
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2.
Preoperatively undiagnosed papillary thyroid carcinoma in patients thyroidectomized for benign multinodular goiter.
Fama, F, Sindoni, A, Cicciu, M, Polito, F, Piquard, A, Saint-Marc, O, Gioffre-Florio, M, Benvenga, S
Archives of endocrinology and metabolism. 2018;(2):139-148
Abstract
OBJECTIVE Incidental thyroid cancers (ITCs) are often microcarcinomas; among them, the most frequent histotype is the papillary one. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the rate of papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) in patients thyroidectomized for benign multinodular goiter. SUBJECT AND METHODS We retrospectively evaluated the histological incidence of PTC in 207 consecutive patients who, in a 1-year period, underwent thyroidectomy for benign multinodular goiter. All patients came from an iodine-deficient area (Orleans, France) with three nuclear power stations located in the neighboring areas of the county town. RESULTS Overall, 25 thyroids (12.1%) harbored 37 PTC, of which 31 were microcarcinomas. In these 25 PTC patients, mean age was 55 ± 10 years (range 30-75), female:male ratio 20:5 (4:1). In 10 patients (40% of 25 and 4.8% of 207), PTCs were bilateral, and in 7 (2 with microPTCs) the thyroid capsule was infiltrated. These 7 patients underwent central and lateral cervical lymph node dissections, which revealed lymph node metastases in one and two cases, respectively. Radioiodine treatment was performed in 7 cases. Neither mortality nor transient and permanent nerve injuries were observed. Four (16%) transient hypocalcaemias occurred as early complications. At last follow-up visit (mean length of follow-up 17.2 ± 3.4 months), all patients were doing well and free of any clinical local recurrence or distant metastases. CONCLUSION With a 12% risk that multinodular goiter harbors preoperatively unsuspected PTCs, which can have already infiltrated the capsule and that can be accompanied by PTC foci contralaterally, an adequate surgical approach has to be considered.
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3.
Follow-up of differentiated thyroid cancer - what should (and what should not) be done.
Lamartina, L, Grani, G, Durante, C, Borget, I, Filetti, S, Schlumberger, M
Nature reviews. Endocrinology. 2018;(9):538-551
Abstract
The treatment paradigm for thyroid cancer has shifted from a one-size-fits-all approach to more personalized protocols that range from active surveillance to total thyroidectomy followed by radioiodine remnant ablation. Accurate surveillance tools are available, but follow-up protocols vary widely between centres and clinicians, owing to the lack of clear, straightforward recommendations on the instruments and assessment schedule that health-care professionals should adopt. For most patients (that is, those who have had an excellent response to the initial treatment and have a low or intermediate risk of tumour recurrence), an infrequent assessment schedule is sufficient (such as a yearly determination of serum levels of TSH and thyroglobulin). Select patients will benefit from second-line imaging and more frequent assessments. This Review discusses the strengths and weaknesses of the surveillance tools and follow-up strategies that clinicians use as a function of the initial treatment and each patient's risk of recurrence.
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4.
Clinical effect of total thyroidectomy combined with radioactive iodine in thyroid cancer treatment.
Yin, X, Li, Z, Zhang, Z, Song, L, Wang, X
Pakistan journal of pharmaceutical sciences. 2018;(4(Special)):1675-1678
Abstract
Aim of this research work is to observe and analyze the clinical effect of total thyroidectomy combined with radioactive iodine in thyroid cancer treatment. The 120 thyroid cancer patients treated in our hospital were enrolled as study subjects and assigned to study group (treated with total thyroidectomy and radioactive iodine) and reference group (treated with conventional total thyroidectomy). The overall treatment efficacy was compared between the two groups. Comparison of overall treatment efficacy of the two groups showed that the study group has superior results to the reference group (P<0.05). Comparison of incidence of recurrent laryngeal nerve injury in the two groups revealed no significant differences, P>0.05. However, in life quality assessment, the study group was significantly superior to the reference group in terms of physiological function, psychological function, social function, and overall life quality scores, P<0.05. Total thyroidectomy combined with radioactive iodine can well improve the overall treatment efficiency and enable patients to have higher quality of life at the same time.
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5.
Lingual Thyroid Carcinoma: A Case Report and Review of Surgical Approaches in the Literature.
Stokes, W, Interval, E, Patel, R
The Annals of otology, rhinology, and laryngology. 2018;(7):475-480
Abstract
INTRODUCTION Lingual thyroid cancer is a rare entity with a paucity of literature guiding methods of surgical treatment. Its location presents anatomic challenges with access and excision. OBJECTIVE We present a case of T4aN1b classical variant papillary thyroid carcinoma of the lingual thyroid that was removed without pharyngeal entry. We also present a review of the literature of this rare entity and propose a treatment algorithm to provide safe and oncologic outcomes. FINDINGS Our review of the literature found 28 case reports of lingual thyroid carcinoma that met search criteria. The trans-cervical/trans-hyoid approach was the most frequently used and provides safe oncologic outcomes. This was followed by the transoral approach and then lateral pharyngotomy. Complications reported across the series include 1 case of pharyngocutaneous fistula associated with mandibulotomy and postoperative respiratory distress requiring reintubation or emergent tracheostomy in 2 patients. CONCLUSION The location of lingual thyroid carcinoma can be variable, and surgical management requires knowledge of adjacent involved structures to decrease the risk of dysphagia and airway compromise. In particular, for cases where there is extensive loss to swallowing mechanisms, laryngeal suspension can allow the patient to resume a normal diet after treatment.
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6.
A clinical pathway for the postoperative management of hypocalcemia after pediatric thyroidectomy reduces blood draws.
Patel, NA, Bly, RA, Adams, S, Carlin, K, Parikh, SR, Dahl, JP, Manning, S
International journal of pediatric otorhinolaryngology. 2018;:132-137
Abstract
OBJECTIVES Postoperative calcium management is challenging following pediatric thyroidectomy given potential limitations in self-reporting symptoms and compliance with phlebotomy. A protocol was created at our tertiary children's institution utilizing intraoperative parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels to guide electrolyte management during hospitalization. The objective of this study was to determine the effect of a new thyroidectomy postoperative management protocol on two primary outcomes: (1) the number of postoperative calcium blood draws and (2) the length of hospital stay. STUDY DESIGN Institutional review board approved retrospective study (2010-2016). METHODS Consecutive pediatric total thyroidectomy and completion thyroidectomy ± neck dissection cases from 1/1/2010 through 8/5/2016 at a single tertiary children's institution were retrospectively reviewed before and after initiation of a new management protocol. All cases after 2/1/2014 comprised the experimental group (post-protocol implementation). The pre-protocol control group consisted of cases prior to 2/1/2014. Multivariable linear and Poisson regression models were used to compare the control and experimental groups for outcome measure of number of calcium lab draws and hospital length of stay. RESULTS 53 patients were included (n = 23, control group; n = 30 experimental group). The median age was 15 years. 41 patients (77.4%) were female. Postoperative calcium draws decreased from a mean of 5.2 to 3.6 per day post-protocol implementation (Rate Ratio = 0.70, p < .001), adjusting for covariates. The mean number of total inpatient calcium draws before protocol initiation was 13.3 (±13.20) compared to 7.2 (±4.25) in the post-protocol implementation group. Length of stay was 2.1 days in the control group and 1.8 days post-protocol implementation (p = .29). Patients who underwent concurrent neck dissection had a longer mean length of stay of 2.32 days compared to 1.66 days in those patients who did not undergo a neck dissection (p = .02). Hypocalcemia was also associated with a longer mean length of stay of 2.41 days compared to 1.60 days in patients who did not develop hypocalcemia (p < .01). CONCLUSIONS The number of calcium blood draws was significantly reduced after introduction of a standardized protocol based on intraoperative PTH levels. The hospital length of stay did not change. Adoption of a standardized postoperative protocol based on intraoperative PTH levels may reduce the number of blood draws in children undergoing thyroidectomy.
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7.
Association of Parathyroid Hormone Level With Postthyroidectomy Hypocalcemia: A Systematic Review.
Mathur, A, Nagarajan, N, Kahan, S, Schneider, EB, Zeiger, MA
JAMA surgery. 2018;(1):69-76
Abstract
IMPORTANCE There has been an increased interest in measuring parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels as an early predictive marker for the development of hypocalcemia after total thyroidectomy. However, significant variation exists in the timing, type of assay, and thresholds of PTH in the literature. OBJECTIVE We performed a systematic review to examine the utility of PTH levels in predicting temporary postthyroidectomy hypocalcemia. EVIDENCE REVIEW A systematic literature review of studies published prior to May 25, 2016 was performed within PubMed, EMBASE, SCOPUS, and Cochrane databases using the following terms and keywords: "thyroidectomy," "parathyroid hormone," and "hypocalcaemia," "calcium," or "calcitriol." Each candidate full-text publication was reviewed by 2 independent reviewers and selected for data extraction if the study examined the prognostic significance of PTH obtained within 24 hours after thyroidectomy to predict hypocalcaemia. Studies were excluded if calcium supplementation was used routinely or based on a PTH level. Study characteristics, PTH parameters used to predict hypocalcemia, and their respective accuracies were summarized. FINDINGS The initial search yielded 2417 abstracts. Sixty-nine studies, comprising 9163 patients, were included. Overall, for an absolute PTH threshold, the median accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity were 86%, 85%, and 86%, respectively. For a percentage change over time the median accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity were 89%, 88%, and 90%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE The existing literature regarding PTH levels to predict postthyroidectomy hypocalcemia is extremely heterogeneous. A single PTH threshold is not a reliable measure of hypocalcemia. Additional prospective studies controlled for timing of laboratory draws and a priori defined PTH thresholds need to be performed to ascertain the true prognostic significance of PTH in predicting postthyroidectomy hypocalcaemia.
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8.
The timing of parathyroid hormone measurement defines the cut-off values to accurately predict postoperative hypocalcemia: a prospective study.
Filho, EBY, Machry, RV, Mesquita, R, Scheffel, RS, Maia, AL
Endocrine. 2018;(2):224-231
Abstract
PURPOSE Serum intact parathyroid hormone (iPTH) level is an early marker of post-thyroidectomy hypocalcemia. However, lack of methodological standardization to define timing and cut-off points of iPTH measurement limit its clinical applicability. Here, we evaluated the relationship between two distinct postoperative time sampling and iPTH accuracy on predicting hypocalcemia. METHODS iPTH was measured within 4 h after surgery (iPTH 4 h) and on the morning of the first postoperative day (iPTH 1st PO). Hypocalcemia was defined by levels of total calcium corrected by serum albumin ≤ 8.0 mg/dL and/or by the presence of symptoms. The most accurate iPTH cut-off point for hypocalcemia prediction was established from a ROC curve comparing both time-points. RESULTS The study included 101 patients. The mean age was 52.4 ± 12.9 years, 93 were women (92.1%) and 69 patients underwent total thyroidectomy (68.3%). Hypocalcemia occurred in 25 patients (24.8%), of whom 12 were symptomatic. Total thyroidectomy, longer duration of surgery, surgical complications related to parathyroid glands and lower levels of iPTH 4 h and iPTH 1st PO were associated with postoperative hypocalcaemia (all P < 0.05). Using the ROC curve, the optimal cut-off points were 19.55 pg/mL and 14.35 pg/mL for iPTH 4 h and iPTH 1st PO, respectively. The comparison of the AUC showed no significant difference between these two points of evaluation (0.935 vs. 0.940; P = 0.415). CONCLUSIONS Serum iPTH levels measured within 4 h or on the first morning after surgery are predictors of postoperative hypocalcemia. Notably, both time-points have the same accuracy to predict postoperative hypocalcemia (with different cutoff points).
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9.
[Risk factors' analysis of transient and permanent hypoparathyroidism after thyroidectomy].
Cocchiara, G, Cajozzo, M, Fazzotta, S, Palumbo, VD, Geraci, G, Maione, C, Buscemi, S, Romano, G, Fatica, F, Spinelli, G, et al
La Clinica terapeutica. 2017;(4):e271-e277
Abstract
AIMS: This review evaluates those main risk factors that can affect patients undergoing thyroidectomy, to reach a better pre- and post-operative management of transient and permanent hypoparathyroidism. DISCUSSION The transient hypoparathyroidism is a potentially severe complication of thyroidectomy, including a wide range of signs and symptoms that persists for a few weeks. The definitive hypoparathyroidism occurs when a medical treatment is necessary over 12 months. Risk factors that may influence the onset of this condition after thyroidectomy include: pre- and post-operative biochemical factors, such as serum calcium levels, vitamin D blood concentrations and intact PTH. Other involved factors could be summarized as follow: female sex, Graves' or thyroid neoplastic diseases, surgeon's dexterity and surgical technique. The medical treatment includes the administration of calcium, vitamin D and magnesium sometimes. CONCLUSIONS Although biological and biochemical factors could be related to iatrogenic hypoparathyroidism, the surgeon's experience and the used surgical technique still maintain a crucial role in the aetiology of this important complication.
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10.
Inadvertent parathyroidectomy during total thyroidectomy and central neck dissection for papillary thyroid carcinoma.
Sitges-Serra, A, Gallego-Otaegui, L, Suárez, S, Lorente-Poch, L, Munné, A, Sancho, JJ
Surgery. 2017;(3):712-719
Abstract
BACKGROUND The main drawback of central neck lymph node dissection is postoperative parathyroid failure. Little information is available concerning inadvertent resection of the parathyroid glands in this setting and its relationship to postoperative hypoparathyroidism. Our aim was to determine the prevalence of inadvertent parathyroidectomy during total thyroidectomy and central neck dissection for papillary thyroid cancer and its impact on short-and long-term parathyroid function. METHODS This was a prospective observational study of consecutive patients undergoing first-time total thyroidectomy with a central neck dissection for papillary carcinoma >10 mm. Prevalence and risk factors for inadvertent parathyroidectomy were recorded. Serum calcium and intact parathyroid hormone concentrations were determined 24 hours after operation and then periodically in patients developing postoperative hypocalcemia. All patients were followed for a minimum of one year. RESULTS Whole gland (n = 33) or microscopic parathyroid fragments (n = 14) were identified in 47/170 (28%) operative specimens. The lower parathyroid glands were involved more often. Variables influencing inadvertent parathyroidectomy were extrathyroidal extension of the tumor and therapeutic lymphadenectomy. Neither lateral neck dissection nor the number of lymph nodes retrieved affected the rate of inadvertent parathyroid resection. Postoperative hypocalcemia and permanent hypoparathyroidism were more frequent after inadvertent parathyroidectomy (64% vs 46% and 15% vs 4%; P ≤ .03 each). CONCLUSION Inadvertent parathyroidectomy during total thyroidectomy with central neck dissection for papillary thyroid carcinoma is common and involves the inferior glands more frequently in patients with extended resections and clinical N1a disease. Inadvertent resection of parathyroid glands is associated with greater rates of postoperative hypocalcemia and permanent hypoparathyroidism.