Parathyroidectomy is the definitive therapy for patients with symptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism. However, the role of surgery in mild asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism remains controversial. Accordingly, we conducted a prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trial of parathyroidectomy to determine the benefits of surgery vs. adverse effects of no surgery. Fifty-three patients were randomly assigned to either parathyroidectomy (n = 25) or regular follow-up (n = 28). Bone mineral density (BMD), biochemical indices of the disease, quality of life, and psychological function were measured at 6- or 12-month intervals for at least 24 months. Twenty-three of the 25 patients randomized to parathyroidectomy had surgery within the specified time of the protocol and three of the 28 patients randomized to regular follow-up had parathyroidectomy during follow-up. After parathyroidectomy, there was an increase in BMD of the spine (1.2%/yr, P < 0.001), femoral neck (0.4%/yr, P = 0.031), total hip (0.3%/yr, P = 0.07), and forearm (0.4%/yr, P < 0.001) and an expected fall in serum total and ionized calcium, serum PTH, and urine calcium (P < 0.001 for all). In contrast, patients followed up without surgery lost BMD at the femoral neck (-0.4%/yr, P = 0.117) and total hip (-0.6%/yr, P = 0.007) but gained at the spine (0.5%/yr; P = ns) and forearm (0.2%/yr, P = 0.047), with no significant changes in biochemical indices of disease. Consequently, a significant effect of parathyroidectomy on BMD was evident only at the femoral neck (a group difference of 0.8%/yr; P = 0.01) and total hip (a group difference of 1.0%/yr; P = 0.001) but not at the spine (a group difference of 0.6%/yr) or forearm (a group difference of 0.2%/yr). Quality-of-life scores as measured by a 36-item short-form health survey showed significant declines in five of the nine domains (social functioning, physical problem, emotional problem, energy, and health perception) in patients followed up without surgery but in only one of the nine domains (physical function) in the patients who had parathyroidectomy. Consequently, a modest measurable benefit of parathyroidectomy was evident in social and emotional role function (P = 0.007 and 0.012, respectively). Psychological function as assessed by the symptom checklist revised did not change significantly in either group, except for a significant decline in anxiety (P = 0.003) and phobia (P = 0.024) in patients who had surgery in comparison with those who did not. We conclude that it is feasible to conduct a randomized, controlled clinical trial of parathyroidectomy in patients with mild asymptomatic primary hyperparathyroidism, and measurable benefits of surgery on BMD, quality of life, and psychological function can be demonstrated. However, the small but significant benefits of parathyroidectomy must be weighed against the risks of surgery in these otherwise healthy individuals.
The anti-fracture efficacy of sodium fluoride (NaF) was evaluated in 84 postmenopausal white women with spinal osteoporosis. The dose of NaF used was 75 mg/day and all patients in this prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial received calcium supplements (carbonate salt) 1500 mg/day in addition to participating in a structured physical therapy program. For each of the outcome measures (change in stature, change in cortical bone mass in the forearm and development of new vertebral fractures determined by change in vertebral morphometry and by scintigraphy) there was no significant difference between the fluoride or placebo treated groups. Side effects, predominantly gastrointestinal symptoms and the development of the painful lower extremity syndrome, occurred significantly more frequently in the fluoride group (P less than 0.05). Peripheral fractures were not more frequent in the fluoride group. We conclude that, in the dose and manner used in this study, NaF is no more effective than placebo in retarding the progression of spinal osteoporosis. There is no role for NaF in the treatment of osteoporosis outside the confines of clinical research.
Technical variant techniques expand the pediatric donor pool and reduce time from listing to transplant, but they are associated with increased morbidity and mortality.
In primary hyperparathyroidism, adenoma size is a major determinant of disease severity and manner of presentation, but the reason for the large variation in size (>100-fold) is unknown. One factor could be the level of vitamin D nutrition, because in India, where vitamin D deficiency is endemic, adenomas are larger and the disease more severe than in the U.S. Accordingly, we determined the relationship between vitamin D nutrition, as measured by serum levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD), and parathyroid gland weight, expressed on a logarithmic scale, in 148 U.S. patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. A significant inverse relationship was found between log gland weight as dependent variable and serum 25OHD as independent variable (r = -0.365; P < 0.0001). The only other influence on gland weight was a weak inverse correlation with age. Log gland weight as an independent variable was significantly related to adjusted calcium, PTH, and alkaline phosphatase (AP) as dependent variables. In 51 patients with serum 25OHD levels less than 15 ng/mL, gland weight, PTH, AP, and adjusted calcium were each significantly higher than in 97 patients with 25OHD levels of 15 ng/mL or more, but 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D levels were similarly increased in both groups. In the former group the response of adjusted calcium to PTH was blunted, and the response of AP was enhanced, based on significant differences in regression slopes (P = 0.0004 and 0.0022, respectively). Suboptimal vitamin D nutrition stimulates parathyroid adenoma growth by a mechanism unrelated to hypocalcemia or 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D deficiency and reduces the calcemic response to PTH, so that a higher PTH level and more parathyroid cells are needed to raise the patient's serum calcium to the level corresponding to the increased set-point that is characteristic of the disease. Improved vitamin D nutrition in the population is partly, perhaps largely, responsible for the historical changes in disease severity and manner of presentation that have occurred over the last 50 yr.
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