Rapid Parathyroid Hormone Analysis during Venous Localization

Robert Udelsman, John E. Aruny, Patricia I. Donovan, Lori J. Sokoll, Florie Santos, Richard Donabedian, Anthony C. Venbrux, Terry C. Lairmore, Richard E. Goldstein

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

54 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: To determine the usefulness of the rapid parathyroid hormone (PTH) assay during venous localization for primary hyperparathyroidism (1° HPTH). Summary Background Data: Remedial exploration for persistent 1° HPTH poses a significant challenge when noninvasive preoperative localization studies are negative. Based on experience with the intraoperative rapid PTH assay, this technique was extrapolated to the interventional radiology suite and generated near real-time data for the interventional radiologist employing on-site hormone analysis, with a 12-minute turnaround time from blood sampling to assay result. Methods: Between November 1997 and July 2002, 446 patients with 1° HPTH were referred for treatment. Of these, 56 (12.5%) represented remedial patients who had each undergone one or more previous cervical explorations. Noninvasive imaging studies were positive for or suggestive of localized disease in 49/56 (87.5%) of these patients, who therefore proceeded directly to surgical exploration. Seven patients with persistent 1° HPTH and negative noninvasive studies underwent selective venous sampling employing a rapid PTH assay in the interventional suite. Results: Venous localization demonstrated an apparent PTH gradient in six of the seven patients. In three, a subtle gradient demonstrated in near real-time prompted additional sampling, which confirmed an unequivocal hormone gradient. In an additional case, the absence of a gradient on initial sampling prompted further sampling, which was positive. All of the patients were explored, and in five of the six patients with a positive PTH gradient, a parathyroid adenoma (mean weight 636 ± 196 mg) was resected from a location predicted by venous localization. In the sixth patient with a positive gradient, parathyroid tissue was not identified; however, there was a significant fall in the intraoperative PTH values, and immediate postoperative and follow-up laboratory data at 1 month are indicative of a cure. In the one patient with negative localization, abnormal parathyroid tissue could not be located during surgical exploration. Conclusions: The rapid PTH assay is a major adjunct for obtaining informative venous localization in patients with persistent 1° HPTH. This information is extremely helpful to the surgeon in this challenging group of patients and resulted in a 100% cure rate when a venous gradient was demonstrated. The authors now employ this technique routinely in remedial patients with negative noninvasive imaging studies.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)714-721
Number of pages8
JournalAnnals of surgery
Volume237
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2003

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Surgery

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