4.5 Article

Parathyroid hormone-driven algorithms after thyroid surgery: Not one-size-fits-all

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hed.27272

Keywords

hypocalcemia; hypoparathyroidism; parathyroid hormone; thyroid; thyroidectomy

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This study aimed to develop a PTH-based protocol to predict hypocalcemia after thyroidectomy. The results showed that using postoperative PTH cut-offs can effectively predict hypocalcemia and reduce unnecessary calcium replacement and length of stay.
BackgroundUnderreported variation in parathyroid hormone (PTH) assays exists. Using quality improvement methods, we aimed to develop an institution-specific PTH-based protocol to predict hypocalcemia after thyroidectomy. MethodsWe retrospectively reviewed patients who underwent total/completion thyroidectomy. A receiver operating curve (ROC) determined postoperative PTH cut-offs predictive of hypocalcemia. The stakeholders developed PTH-driven calcium management guidelines. Post-implementation outcomes were prospectively measured. ResultsPre-implementation, 95 patients were assessed. PTH <= 1.5 pmol/L (14.1 pg/ml) predicted hypocalcemia (96%sensitivity), and >= 2.8 pmol/L (26.4 pg/ml) predicted normocalcemia (99%specificity) (area under curve = 0.97, SEM = 0.018). PTH on the day of and morning after surgery were identically predictive. Post-implementation, 64 patients were assessed. Hypocalcemia occurred with PTH >2.8 pmol/L in 2 cases (3.1%). Calcium over-prescribing decreased from 13.7% to 3.1% (p = 0.06). Length of stay (LOS) > 2 nights decreased from 13% to 3.1% (p = 0.05). ConclusionA PTH-driven calcium management protocol post-thyroidectomy effectively reduces unnecessary calcium replacement and LOS. Given the variability in PTH assays, each institution may need to use individual cut-offs.

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