Abstract

BackgroundChildhood and adolescent primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) is a rare disease caused by single adenomas in 65–94% of patients. In this patient group, there is no data on computed tomography (CT) for pre-operative parathyroid localization that may facilitate focused parathyroidectomy. MethodsTwo radiologists reviewed dual-phase (nonenhanced and arterial) CT images of twenty-three operated children and adolescents [20:single-gland disease(SGD), 3:multi-glandular disease(MGD)] with proven histopathological PHPT. Percentage arterial enhancement (PAE) was calculated as [100*{arterial-phase Hounsfield unit (HU)-nonenhanced phase HU}/nonenhanced HU] of the parathyroid lesion(s), thyroid, and lymph node. ResultsDual-phase CT lateralized 100%, localized to the correct quadrant/site 85% SGD (including 3/3 ectopic), and identified 1/3 MGD. PAE (cutoff ≥ 112.3%) was sensitive (91.3%) and specific (99.5%) in distinguishing parathyroid lesions from local mimics (P<0.001). The average effective dose was 3.16±1.01mSv, comparable to the planar/single photon emission CT (SPECT) Technetium 99m(Tc)-sestamibi and choline positron emission tomography (PET)/CT scans. Solid-cystic morphology identified in 4 patients harboring pathogenic germline variants (3:CDC73, 1:CASR) may serve as a radiological clue to molecular diagnosis. Nineteen out of 20 (95%) patients with SGD who had undergone single gland resection based on pre-operative CT findings were in remission over a median follow-up of 18 months. ConclusionAs most children/adolescents with PHPT have SGD, dual-phase CT protocols which reduce the effective radiation dose with high localization sensitivity for single parathyroid lesions may be a sustainable pre-operative imaging modality in this patient group.

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