Abstract

BackgroundRenal hyperparathyroidism is a disease entity that is complex and poorly understood. Although there are guidelines regarding how to manage this patient group, evidence is scarce. Therefore, this survey-based study aims to map the physicians’ attitude in terms of preference for management of renal hyperparathyroidism and the influence of patient and respondent factors.MethodsA survey was sent to Dutch societies of nephrology, endocrinology, and surgeons with interest in endocrine surgery. The survey consisted of eight case vignettes of renal hyperparathyroidism patients who were on hemodialysis and suitable for kidney transplantation, and varied in one of three patient variables import for decision making: age (40 vs. 65 years), parathyroid hormone (40 vs. 90 pmol/L), and serum calcium level (2.25 vs. 2.8 mmol/L). For each case, respondents could choose between maintaining conservative treatment (active vitamin D metabolites), calcimimetics, or subtotal parathyroidectomy as their treatment of choice. Categorical multilevel logistic models were used to investigate the association of patient and respondent variables with treatment preference. The influence of patient variables was determined independently of each other and by means of logistic regression the probabilities of treatment choice were calculated.ResultsIn total, 115 surveys were included in the analysis. In 6 out of 8 cases, less than two-thirds of respondents agreed on the most favoured treatment. Among patient characteristics, the main disincentive for respondents not to choose conservative therapy was an elevated serum calcium level (subtotal parathyroidectomy vs conservative OR 93.1, 95%-CI: 48.39–179.07 and calcimimetics vs conservative OR 31.2 95%-CI: 18.58–52.30). Additionally, the most significant treatment differences were found between medical specialties and the experience of the respondents, expressed as the amount of cases the physician was involved in during the past year.ConclusionsElevated serum calcium levels were widely recognized and the prime reason for respondents to abandon conservative treatment. However, considerable disagreement in treatment preferences remained throughout the cases, demonstrating the current literature available being inconclusive in guiding physicians. Therefore, a high-quality trial comparing subtotal parathyroidectomy to medical treatment is needed to determine optimal treatment.

Highlights

  • One of the most common and early metabolic disorders in chronic kidney disease (CKD) is renal hyperparathyroidism (RHPT)

  • RHPT can be divided into secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) and tertiary hyperparathyroidism (THPT)

  • This emerges from the dilemma wherein RHPT-patients refractory to conservative therapy, meaning active vitamin D metabolites, require high doses of activated vitamin D despite the potential to cause hypercalcemia in SHP

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most common and early metabolic disorders in chronic kidney disease (CKD) is renal hyperparathyroidism (RHPT). RHPT can be divided into secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) and tertiary hyperparathyroidism (THPT). The former is usually diagnosed at first in patients with CKD and is characterized by elevated parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels as a result of the derangements in the homeostasis of phosphate, vitamin D, and, in later stages, calcium. RHPT pathophysiology is complex as many pathogenetic peculiarities are not defined nor understood. There are guidelines regarding how to manage this patient group, evidence is scarce This survey-based study aims to map the physicians’ attitude in terms of preference for management of renal hyperparathyroidism and the influence of patient and respondent factors

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