Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2010) 21 OC4.7

SFEBES2009 Oral Communications Bone and parathyroid (8 abstracts)

Persistent symptomatic improvement at more than 12 months after parathyroidectomy for primary hyperparathyrodism

Preethi Gopinath , Gregory Sadler & Radu Mihai


Department of Endocrine Surgery, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK.


Background: Parathyroidectomy for primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) is followed by a decrease in the severity of symptoms reported on the Pasieka’s parathyroid symptoms score (PPSS) questionnaires and such changes correlate with improved quality of life assessed by the SF36 questionnaire (World J Surg 2008 32 807). Some argue that these benefits are short-lived and only apparent in the first months postoperatively.

Aim: To determine whether there is a persistent improvement in symptoms at more than 12 months after parathyroidectomy.

Methods: A prospective database collected clinical and operative information on consecutive patients with biochemical diagnosis of PHPT. PPSS was calculated as the sum of the 13 parameters self-assessed using a visual analogue scale (max 1300). SF-36(v2) analysis was made using commercially available software (QualityMetric Inc., Lincoln, USA). Data were compared using paired t-test.

Results: Between Nov 2006 and April 2009 190 patients (133F:57M, age 15–89 years, median 62 years) diagnosed with PHPT (Ca 2.90±0.25 mmol/l, PTH 10.5±4.6 pmol/l) had scan-directed minimally invasive parathyroidectomy (n=131) or bilateral neck exploration (n=54). Preoperative PPSS scores ranged 0–1260 (median 415) and did not correlate with the severity of hypercalcaemia.

All patients were contacted at 16±6 months (median 15 months) postoperatively. There were 106 replies. The 1-year PPSS (237±208) were significantly lower than preoperative scores (417±240, P<0.0001). The improvement in symptoms was most significant for mood (35±33 vs 16±23) and tiredness (56±29 vs 31±27) (P<0.0001). Some two thirds of patients experienced persistent symptomatic benefits (Table).

Postoperative symptomsnPreop PPSSPostop PPSSP
Improved (decreased PPSS by >20%)69459±222155±131<0.0001
No change (PPSS within ±20%)16472±236429±2250.009
Worsened* (increased PPSS by >20%)18195±184367±2530.0002
Non responders84409±326
*Possibly related to subsequent diagnoses of other medical conditions (e.g. fibromyalgia and osteoarthritis).

Conclusion: Symptomatic benefits after parathyroidectomy for PHPT persist for at least 1 year in at least two thirds of patients. The Pasieka’s questionnaire could be used to monitor symptoms and compare outcome in patients operated or observed during long-term follow-up for PHPT.

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