Abstract
Background and objectivesTo assess the feasibility of performing selective parathyroidectomy without intraoperative parathyroid hormone (PTHio) determination when first-line preoperative localization tests (ultrasonography and [99mTc]Tc-MIBI) are negative and/or discordant, and second-line [18F]F-Colina PET-CT, is positive. Materials and methodsRetrospective cohort study, including patients with negative or discordant ultrasound and MIBI scans and positive [18F]F-Colina PET-CT, who underwent selective parathyroidectomy between 2019 and 2022. Groups were compared based on PTHio determination. Study variables were: gender, mean age, biochemical cure assessed by PTH value (pg/mL) and corrected calcium by albumin (mg/dL) at 6 months post-surgery follow-up, and histopathological analysis. ResultsThe final sample included 42 patients. At 6 months post-surgery, in the PTHio group (20 patients), PTH values were 64.50 pg/mL and calcium 9.30 pg/mL, with 19 adenomas and 1 hyperplasia found. In the non-PTHio group (22 patients), PTH values were 61 pg/mL and calcium 9.37 pg/mL, with 22 adenomas found. No statistically significant differences were found between both groups. ConclusionsBased on the results obtained in our patient cohort, selective parathyroidectomy could be considered with negative or discordant first-line tests and positive [18F]F-Colina PET-CT, without intraoperative PTH determination.
Published Version
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