Sosa J A, Powe N R, Levine M A, Udelsman R, Zeiger M A
Department of Surgery, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21287, USA.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1998 Aug;83(8):2658-65. doi: 10.1210/jcem.83.8.5006.
A 1991 NIH Consensus Development Conference statement provided recommendations for the management of patients with asymptomatic and minimally symptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism (primary HPT), but adherence to these guidelines has not been documented. We conducted a cross-sectional survey of North American members of the American Association of Endocrine Surgeons inquiring about surgeon and primary HPT patient characteristics, thresholds for surgery, and clinical outcomes. Multivariate regression was used to assess the relationship of physician characteristics to practice patterns and outcomes. Of 190 surgeons surveyed, 147 (77%) responded; 109 provided complete responses (57%). These surgeons spend 66% of their time in patient care and perform an average of 33 (range, 1-130) parathyroidectomies/yr. More than 72% of primary HPT patients who underwent surgery were asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic. High volume surgeons (>50 cases/yr) had significantly lower thresholds for surgery with respect to abnormalities in preoperative creatinine clearance, bone densitometry changes, and levels of intact PTH and urinary calcium compared to their low volume colleagues (1-15 cases/yr). Overall reported surgical cure rates were 95.2% after primary operation and 82.7% after reoperation. Compared to high volume surgeons, low volume endocrine surgeons had significantly higher complication rates after primary operation (1.9% vs. 1.0% respectively; P < 0.01) and reoperation (3.8% vs. 1.5%; P < 0.001) as well as higher in-hospital mortality rates (1.0% vs. 0.04%; P < 0.05). Endocrine surgeons operate on a large number of asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic primary HPT patients. Even among a group of highly experienced surgeons who typically see patients after referral from endocrinologists, clinical outcomes and criteria for surgery vary widely and appear to be associated with surgeon experience. Their criteria for surgery diverge from NIH guidelines. These results implore the endocrine community to examine the evidential basis for decisions made in the management of primary HPT.
1991年美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)共识发展会议声明为无症状和症状轻微的原发性甲状旁腺功能亢进症(原发性甲旁亢)患者的管理提供了建议,但尚未有关于遵循这些指南情况的记录。我们对美国内分泌外科医师协会的北美成员进行了一项横断面调查,询问外科医生和原发性甲旁亢患者的特征、手术阈值及临床结果。采用多因素回归分析来评估医生特征与手术方式及结果之间的关系。在接受调查的190名外科医生中,147名(77%)作出回应;109名提供了完整回复(57%)。这些外科医生将66%的时间用于患者护理,平均每年进行33例(范围为1 - 130例)甲状旁腺切除术。接受手术的原发性甲旁亢患者中,超过72%无症状或症状轻微。与低手术量的同行(每年1 - 15例)相比,高手术量的外科医生(每年>50例)在术前肌酐清除率异常、骨密度测量变化、完整甲状旁腺激素水平和尿钙水平方面的手术阈值显著更低。总体报告的初次手术后手术治愈率为95.2%,再次手术后为82.7%。与高手术量的外科医生相比,低手术量的内分泌外科医生在初次手术后(分别为1.9%对1.0%;P < 0.01)和再次手术后(3.8%对1.5%;P < 0.001)的并发症发生率显著更高,住院死亡率也更高(1.0%对0.04%;P < 0.05)。内分泌外科医生为大量无症状或症状轻微的原发性甲旁亢患者实施手术。即使在一组通常在接受内分泌科医生转诊后诊治患者的经验丰富的外科医生中,临床结果和手术标准也存在很大差异,且似乎与外科医生的经验有关。他们的手术标准与NIH指南不同。这些结果促使内分泌学界审视原发性甲旁亢管理决策的证据基础。