| Literature DB >> 29107998 |
Mugurel Apetrii1,2, David Goldsmith3, Ionut Nistor1,2,4, Dimitrie Siriopol1,2, Luminita Voroneanu1,2, Dragos Scripcariu1,5, Marc Vervloet6, Adrian Covic1,2.
Abstract
For more than 6 decades, many patients with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) have undergone surgical parathyroidectomy (sPTX) for severe secondary hyperparathyroidism (SHPT) mainly based historical clinical practice patterns, but not on evidence of outcome.We aimed in this meta-analysis to evaluate the benefits and harms of sPTX in patients with SHPT. We searched MEDLINE (inception to October 2016), EMBASE and Cochrane Library (through Issue 10 of 12, October 2016) and website clinicaltrials.gov (October 2016) without language restriction. Eligible studies evaluated patients reduced glomerular filtration rate (GFR), below 60 mL/min/1.73 m2 (CKD 3-5 stages) with hyperparathyroidism who underwent sPTX. Reviewers working independently and in duplicate extracted data and assessed the risk of bias. The final analysis included 15 cohort studies, comprising 24,048 participants. Compared with standard treatment, sPTX significantly decreased all-cause mortality (RR 0.74 [95% CI, 0.66 to 0.83]) in End Stage Kidney Disease (ESKD) patients with biochemical and / or clinical evidence of SHPT. sPTX was also associated with decreased cardiovascular mortality (RR 0.59 [95% CI, 0.46 to 0.76]) in 6 observational studies that included almost 10,000 patients. The available evidence, mostly observational, is at moderate risk of bias, and limited by indirect comparisons and inconsistency in reporting for some outcomes (eg. short term adverse events, including documented voice change or episodes of severe hypocalcaemia needing admission or long-term adverse events, including undetectable PTH levels, risk of fractures etc.). Taken together, the results of this meta-analysis would suggest a clinically significant beneficial effect of sPTX on all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in CKD patients with SHPT. However, given the observational nature of the included studies, the case for a properly conducted, independent randomised controlled trial comparing surgery with medical therapy and featuring many different outcomes from mortality to quality of life (QoL) is now very strong.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29107998 PMCID: PMC5673225 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0187025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Selection and description of studies.
Demographic and characteristics of studies included in the meta-analysis.
| Reference (first author) | Country | Parients No | Age | Gender (male%) | Newcastle-Ottawa score | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PTX | CTRL | PTX | CTRL | PTX | CTRL | Selection | Comparability | Exposure | ||
| Ivarsson etal. 2015 [ | Sweden | 423 | 1234 | 55.2 | 56 | 48.2 | 50.1 | *** | ** | ** |
| Komaba et al. 2015 [ | Japan | 4428 | 4428 | 59.1 ± 11.6 | 59.3±12.3 | 55.8 | 55.7 | *** | ** | *** |
| Conzo et al. 2013 [ | Italy | 30 | 20 | 51.5±10.89 | 55±11.2 | 26.7 | 40 | *** | ||
| Sharma et al. 2013 [ | US | 150 | 1044 | 42.1 | 42.2 | 46.7 | 46.7 | *** | ** | ** |
| Goldstein et al 2013 [ | Brazil | 123 | 128 | 46 | 50 | 46.3 | 44.5 | *** | ** | |
| Iwamoto et al 2012 [ | Japan | 88 | 88 | 60.6±8.4 | 60.5±8.4 | 53.4 | 53.4 | *** | ** | ** |
| Kestenbaun et al. 2004 [ | US | 4558 | 4558 | 47.6 | 47.6 | 42.5 | 42.5 | *** | ** | |
| Trombetti et al. 2007 [ | Switzerland | 40 | 80 | 42.6 | 55 | 45 | 51 | *** | ** | ** |
| Ho LC et al. 2016 [ | Taiwan | 998 | 998 | 54.7 | 55 | 42.9 | 42.5 | *** | ** | *** |
| Moldovan et al. 2015 [ | Romania | 26 | 26 | 51.62±9.92 | 49.65±11.49 | 53.84 | 23.07 | *** | ** | |
| Li-Wedong et al 2016 [ | China | 53 | 92 | 63.1±13.8 | 53.8±15 | 56.6 | 70.6 | *** | ||
| Costa-Hong et al 2007 [ | Brazil | 50 | 68 | 52 | 59 | 43±10 | 45±12 | ** | ** | |
| Dussol B et al 2007[ | France | 19 | 32 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | ** | ** | |
| Ma T-L et al 2015[ | Taiwan | 60 | 161 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | ** | ** | |
| Lin H-C 2014[ | Taiwan | 30 | 23 | 53.3 ± 13.3 | 53.4 ±13.9 | 43 | 61 | *** | ** | |
Abbreviations: PTX-parathyroidectomy, CTRL- control
*- Stars awarded for each quality item (Newcastle-Ottawa scale). For each domain, either a "star" or "no star" is assigned, with a "star" indicating that study design element was considered adequate and less likely to introduce bias. For Selection (of the exposed cohort, of the non-exposed cohort, ascertainment of exposure and outcome of interest) a maximum of four stars may be assigned. A maximum of two stars can be given for Comparability and a maximum of 3 stars can be given for Exposure (assessment of outcome, length of follow-up and adequacy offollow-up). A study could receive a maximum of nine stars.
Baseline characteristics of the studies included in the meta-analysis.
| Reference (first author) | Design of study | Duration of follow-up (months) | Baseline PTH | Type of surgery | Type of control group | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PTX | CTRL | |||||||
| Ivarsson et al. 2015 | Cohort-multicenter- prospective | 61.3 | N/A | N/A | Total and subtotal PTX | Between one and five patients randomly matched who had not undergone PTX. The matching criteria were birth year in 10-year categories, sex and cause of ESKD in categories (autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, diabetes mellitus, glomerulonephritis, nephrosclerosis, pyelonephritis and other/unknown. | Patients on maintenance dialysis and transplantation with SHPT | Errors in reporting of patient information censoring on the same day as initiation of RRT |
| Komaba et al. 2015 | Cohort-multicenter- prospective | 12 | 96 (28–236) | 669 (570–870) | Total and subtotal PTX | Propensity score-matched patients who had not despite severe SHPT | ≥ 18 years of age with SHPT and were receiving haemodialysis thrice weekly for more than 3 months | No data on demographic characteristics, dialysis prescription, intact PTH levels, or history of PTX |
| Conzo et al. 2013 | One-center retrospective | 60 | 142.08 ± 64.01 | 102.94 ± 32.51 | Total PTX and total PTX with auto-transplantation | Patients with indication for PTX but refusing surgery | SHPT, unresponsive to medical treatment iPTH levels > 53–84, 8 pmol/L, serum P level > 2,09 mmol/l, US enlarged parathyroid glands (> 1 cm or >500 mm3) and persisting clinical symptoms, six months after medical therapy | Renal transplantation, |
| Sharma et al. 2013 | Retrospective and matched-cohort study | 33.6 | N/A | N/A | Near-total parathyroidectomy | For each NTPTX patient, controls were individually matched for age (±2 years), sex, race, diabetes as cause of end-stage renal disease, dialysis duration (vintage), year they started dialysis (±1 year), and dialysis modality | Prevalent haemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis with SHPT | Kidney transplant, no SHPT, no records on dialysis modality |
| Goldstein et al 2013 | Retrospective cohort study | 23 | 1554 | 1360 | Total parathyroidectomy with auto-transplantation | Patients with refractory SHPT not submitted to PTX | PTH greater than 800 pg/ml on calcitriol or in the presence of hyperphosphatemiaand/or hypercalcemia which prevented the use of calcitriol | Kidney transplant and predialysis patients No SHPT |
| Iwamoto et al 2012 | Retrospective cohort study | 53 | 884.5 ± 388.5 | 199.0 ± 120.2 | Total PTX without autotransplantation | Matched patients for sex, age, underlying disease and prior dialysis history | PTH >500 pg/mL and enlarged parathyroid glands confirmed by imaging, enlarged parathyroid gland with imaging and resistant to reduction of iPTH to below 200 pg/mL for hypercalcemia (corrected Ca>11.0 mg/dL) with VDRAs. | N/A |
| Kestenbaum et al. 2004 | prospective cohort study | 53.4 | N/A | N/A | Total+subtotal PTX | Individually matched by age, race, gender, cause of ESKD, dialysis duration, prior transplantation status, and dialysis modality | at least 18 years old and had initiated renal replacement therapy with SHPT | Death, lost to follow-up, or underwent PTX during the first 90 days of renal replacement therapy |
| Trombetti et al. 2007 | retrospective cohort study | 360 | N/A | N/A | Subtotal or total PTX with autotransplantation | two matched controls for each PTX case | ESKD and severe hyperparathyroidism | Kidney transplant, no records, no SHPT |
| Ho LC et al. 2016 | retrospective cohort study | 41.52±30.12 | N/A | N/A | N/A | The parathyroidectomized patients were matched with the controls based on propensity score for parathyroidectomy | Prevalent dialysis with unremitting SHPT | Renal transplantation prior to dialysis or a history of any kind of malignancy before the initiation of long-term dialysis |
| Moldovan et al. 2015 | prospective cohort study | 24 | 2037 | 1282 | Subtotal or total PTX | patients with iPTH over 700 pg/ml, without surgical intervention and treated with specific drugs | severe sHPT, non-responsive to medical treatment with hypercalcemia and hyperphosphatemia | ESKD patients with SHPT and no parathyroid surgery |
| Li-Wedong et al 2016 | prospective cohort study | 12 | 395.3 ± 332.4 | 349.8 ± 334.5 | N/A | Dialysed patient with SHPT | Age>18 years and less than 70 years old. (Duration of HD is more than 3 months. Patients with SHPT (Based on the 2002 KDOQI) | patients with malignant neoplasms, active tuberculosis, AIDS, receiving kidney transplant surgery within one year, pregnancy or lactation, life expectancy being less than 12 months, acute malnutrition, uncontrolled hypertension, severe anemia, serious liver diseases or interrupted follow-up because of all kinds of reasons |
| Costa-Hong et al 2007 | prospective cohort study | N/A | 1278 ±699 | 1243± 753 | Total PTX with autotransplantation in the forearm | Patients who had the diagnosis of medically resistant SHPT and not submitted to PTX | Resistance to medical treatment that was | Renal transplantation, previous myocardial revascularization, smokers, individuals using lipid-lowering drugs, patients with diabetes, and those with a history of heart failure, stroke, unstable angina, or myocardial infarction within 12 months preceding the initiation of the study |
| Dussol B et al 2007 | prospective cohort study | 96 | N/A | N/A | Total+subtotal PTX | Patients undergoing chronic hemodialysis treatment | N/A | N/A |
| Ma T-L et al 2015 | Prospective cohort study | 36 | N/A | N/A | N/A | Hemodialysed patients with iPTH values greater than 800 pg/dL | N/A | N/A |
| Lin H-C 2014 | prospective cohort study | 72 | 1011 ±247 | 1007 ± 251 | total PTX with autograft to the brachioradialis muscle in the forearm without arteriovenous shunt. | ESKD patients who were treated with maintenance haemodialysis and who had intact parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels > 800 pg/ml not receiving PTX | Haemodialysis patients with severe secondary hyperparathyroidism. Severe SHPTH was diagnosed when a patient’s PTH level was higher than 800 pg/ml and was associated with the following symptoms: bone and joint pain, muscle weakness, irritability, itching, bone loss, anaemia resistant to erythropoietin, cardiomyopathy or calciphylaxis. | Switched ti peritoneal dialysis Transfer to other hospital Incomplete medical history Received kidney transplant Not eligible for operation Had previous PTX |
Abbreviations: PTH-parathormone, RRT-renal replacement therapy, PTX-parathyroidectomy, SHPT- hyperparathyroidism, ESKD- end–stage kidney disease, VDRAs- vitamin D receptor activators, N/A- not available
Fig 2The effect of parathyroidectomy on all-cause mortality.
Fig 3The effect of parathyroidectomy on cardiovascular mortality.
Fig 4Funnel plot for all-cause mortality.
Fig 5Subgroup analysis for low and high PTH value at baseline.
Fig 6Subgroup analysis according to the moment of calcimimetics introduction.
Fig 7The effect of parathyroidectomy on short-term (30-days) mortality.