P Miccoli1, G Frustaci, A Fosso, M Miccoli, G Materazzi. 1. Department of Surgery, Medical, Molecular and Critical Area Pathology, University of Pisa, Via Paradisa 2, 56124, Pisa, Italy.
Abstract
PURPOSE: This report examines outcomes in our series of patients who underwent surgery for recurrent goiter to assess the efficacy of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH)-suppressive therapy after the first less than total thyroidectomy. A further outcome was to understand whether redo surgery was burdened with a higher rate of complications. METHODS: We evaluated 214 patients undergoing a completion thyroidectomy for recurrent goiter who had received, as their first surgery, a bilateral subtotal thyroidectomy. After the first operation, 84 patients were given TSH-suppressive therapy withlevothyroxine, 32 were treated with antithyroid drugs, and 92 did not receive any suppressive treatment but only a substitutive therapy. The 84 patients who receivedlevothyroxine at a suppressive dosage (group A) were compared with 92 patients who did not receive levothyroxine or received it only at substitutive dosage (group B). We further compared the complication rate of a similar group of 175 patients who had undergone a primary thyroidectomy. RESULTS: The average age at intervention for relapse in group A patients was significantly lower than that of group B patients: 54.18 vs 60.8 years (p < 0.001). The average interval between the first intervention and the intervention for relapse was significantly shorter in group A than in group B: 24 vs 27 years (p = 0.03). After the operation, temporary hypoparathyroidism occurred in 37.7 % of patients and definitive hypoparathyroidism in 7.2 %. CONCLUSIONS: Our results clearly show that the interval between the two surgical interventions was significantly reduced in patients undergoing TSH-suppressive therapy with levothyroxine. The incidence of hypoparathyroidism dramatically increased.
RCT Entities:
PURPOSE: This report examines outcomes in our series of patients who underwent surgery for recurrent goiter to assess the efficacy of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH)-suppressive therapy after the first less than total thyroidectomy. A further outcome was to understand whether redo surgery was burdened with a higher rate of complications. METHODS: We evaluated 214 patients undergoing a completion thyroidectomy for recurrent goiter who had received, as their first surgery, a bilateral subtotal thyroidectomy. After the first operation, 84 patients were given TSH-suppressive therapy with levothyroxine, 32 were treated with antithyroid drugs, and 92 did not receive any suppressive treatment but only a substitutive therapy. The 84 patients who received levothyroxine at a suppressive dosage (group A) were compared with 92 patients who did not receive levothyroxine or received it only at substitutive dosage (group B). We further compared the complication rate of a similar group of 175 patients who had undergone a primary thyroidectomy. RESULTS: The average age at intervention for relapse in group A patients was significantly lower than that of group B patients: 54.18 vs 60.8 years (p < 0.001). The average interval between the first intervention and the intervention for relapse was significantly shorter in group A than in group B: 24 vs 27 years (p = 0.03). After the operation, temporary hypoparathyroidism occurred in 37.7 % of patients and definitive hypoparathyroidism in 7.2 %. CONCLUSIONS: Our results clearly show that the interval between the two surgical interventions was significantly reduced in patients undergoing TSH-suppressive therapy with levothyroxine. The incidence of hypoparathyroidism dramatically increased.
Authors: P P Morosini; A Taccaliti; R Montironi; M Scarpelli; L Diamanti; G Simonella; V Mancini; M D Petrelli; F Mantero Journal: Thyroid Date: 1996-10 Impact factor: 6.568
Authors: Carlo Carella; Gherardo Mazziotti; Mario Rotondi; Andrea Del Buono; Guido Zito; Francesca Sorvillo; Giovanni Manganella; Luigi Santini; Giovanni Amato Journal: Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) Date: 2002-10 Impact factor: 3.478
Authors: Bo Gao; Wuguo Tian; Yan Jiang; Shu Zhang; Lingji Guo; Jianjie Zhao; Gang Zhang; Shuai Hao; Yan Xu; Donglin Luo Journal: Int J Clin Exp Med Date: 2015-12-15