Demeter J G, De Jong S A, Lawrence A M, Paloyan E
Department of Surgery, Loyola University Medical Center, Maywood, Illinois.
Am Surg. 1993 Mar;59(3):178-81.
Recurrent hyperparathyroidism (HPT) occurs in a small percentage of patients undergoing parathyroidectomy for primary HPT and is usually due to inadequate excision of hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue in the neck, a missed ectopic and hyperplastic parathyroid, or, less commonly, parathyroid carcinoma and parathyroid autografts. In order to determine the incidence, clinical characteristics, and outcome of patients with recurrent HPT due to parathyroid autografts, we reviewed our experience with 604 consecutive patients operated on for primary HPT between 1965 and 1989. One hundred of these patients received parathyroid autografts consisting of portions of one or more parathyroid glands. Three patients with autografts, placed in the sternocleidomastoid muscle, developed recurrent HPT due to their autografts for an incidence of 3 per cent. Recurrent disease was diagnosed between 62 and 113 months with an average of 89 months. The autotransplants in all three of these patients were from hyperplastic or adenomatous parathyroid tissue. Two patients had a history of neck irradiation. Preoperative thallium scans accurately localized the hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue in all three patients. At operation, the hyperfunctioning autografts had grown into a discrete mass with a single vascular pedicle and were resected. Histologic examination disclosed either hyperplastic or adenomatous tissue, and corresponded to the histology and location of the original tissue transplanted in each case. Follow-up ranges from 12 to 67 months, with an average of 48 months. All patients remain cured and none require oral calcium supplementation. We conclude that graft-dependent recurrent HPT is due to the autotransplantation of hyperplastic or adenomatous parathyroid tissue and that thallium scanning is instrumental for diagnosis and localization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)