Mallette L E, Blevins T, Jordan P H, Noon G P
Surgery. 1987 Jun;101(6):738-45.
Sixteen patients with generalized primary parathyroid hyperplasia were treated with attempted total parathyroidectomy and placement of an autogenous parathyroid graft in the forearm musculature; these patients have been followed for up to 79 months. We assessed completeness of parathyroidectomy on the basis of the background immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH) value 3 to 7 days after surgery, which predicted the chance of a graft-independent recurrence or persistence of hyperparathyroidism (0/8 if undetectable versus 4/5 if normal or high). Total parathyroidectomy was sometimes difficult to achieve because of the presence of supernumerary or ectopic parathyroid glands; to enhance the success rate of total parathyroidectomy, we suggest both the use of preoperative ultrasonography to locate intrathyroidal parathyroids and a routine search for supernumerary parathyroids that includes transcervical thymectomy. Graft function was monitored by measuring the secretory gradient for iPTH (the difference between the two antecubital fossae). Gradients on postoperative days 3 to 7 were barely detectable, but by 3 weeks, larger iPTH gradients were noted in every case. By 4 months, the graft could maintain normal serum calcium levels in all but one case. Autonomous graft function has evolved in four of six evaluable patients with type I multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN I), but in none of the nine patients with sporadic hyperplasia (p = 0.043). A prospective study is needed to determine whether the use of a smaller number of parathyroid fragments for the autogenous graft in known MEN I patients might delay recurrence.