Erschienen in:
17.10.2022 | Original Article
The impact of near-infrared autofluorescence on postoperative hypoparathyroidism during total thyroidectomy: a case–control study
verfasst von:
Diego Barbieri, Pietro Indelicato, Alessandro Vinciguerra, Emilio Salerno, Rosa Alessia Battista, Federico Di Marco, Leone Giordano, Francesca Lira Luce, Stefano Bondi, Matteo Trimarchi, Mario Bussi
Erschienen in:
Endocrine
|
Ausgabe 2/2023
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Abstract
Purpose
Near-infrared autofluorescence is a new technology in thyroid surgery to better localize and preserve parathyroid glands. The purpose of this study is to assess if the adoption of NIR-AF can improve in short-, medium-, and long-term post-operative calcium and PTH levels compared to conventional “naked eye” surgery in patients undergoing TT for benign or malignant conditions.
Methods
134 patients undergone total thyroidectomy between January 2020 and June 2022; 67 were treated with conventional thyroidectomy, the other 67 underwent surgery adopting an autofluorescence detecting device.
Results
Significant differences were found between the two groups in percentage of patients with short-term hypocalcemia (p = 0.04) and short-term hypoparathyroidism (p = 0.011). Median short-term (p = 0.01) and medium-term (p = 0.03) PTH levels were significantly higher in autofluorescence group, while, short- (p = 0.001), medium- (p < 0.001) and long-term (p = 0.019) percentage variation of PTH levels from baseline were significantly higher in the standard-care group. Finally, the prescription of oral calcium (p < 0.01) after surgery were significantly lower in the autofluorescence group.
Conclusion
The adoption of near-infrared autofluorescence during total thyroidectomy is related to lower short-term hypocalcemia and hypoparathyroidism rates, decreased variation of post-operative PTH levels in short- and medium- and long-term, reducing the necessity of supplementation therapy with oral calcium compared to conventional surgery.