A panel of immunohistochemistry (PGP9.5, galectin-3, parafibromin, and Ki67) is better than any single marker and can be used to supplement classical histopathology in diagnosing parathyroid cancer.
Background
Post-thyroidectomy haemorrhage occurs in 1–2 per cent of patients, one-quarter requiring bedside clot evacuation. Owing to the risk of life-threatening haemorrhage, previous British Association of Endocrine and Thyroid Surgeons (BAETS) guidance has been that day-case thyroidectomy could not be endorsed. This study aimed to review the best currently available UK data to evaluate a recent change in this recommendation.
Methods
The UK Registry of Endocrine and Thyroid Surgery was analysed to determine the incidence of and risk factors for post-thyroidectomy haemorrhage from 2004 to 2018.
Results
Reoperation for bleeding occurred in 1.2 per cent (449 of 39 014) of all thyroidectomies. In multivariable analysis male sex, increasing age, redo surgery, retrosternal goitre and total thyroidectomy were significantly correlated with an increased risk of reoperation for bleeding, and surgeon monthly thyroidectomy rate correlated with a decreased risk. Estimation of variation in bleeding risk from these predictors gave low pseudo-R2 values, suggesting that bleeding is unpredictable. Reoperation for bleeding occurred in 0.9 per cent (217 of 24 700) of hemithyroidectomies, with male sex, increasing age, decreasing surgeon volume and redo surgery being risk factors. The mortality rate following thyroidectomy was 0.1 per cent (23 of 38 740). In a multivariable model including reoperation for bleeding node dissection and age were significant risk factors for mortality.
Conclusion
The highest risk for bleeding occurred following total thyroidectomy in men, but overall bleeding was unpredictable. In hemithyroidectomy increasing surgeon thyroidectomy volume reduces bleeding risk. This analysis supports the revised BAETS recommendation to restrict day-case thyroid surgery to hemithyroidectomy performed by high-volume surgeons, with caution in the elderly, men, patients with retrosternal goitres, and those undergoing redo surgery.
Background
Intraoperative nerve monitoring (IONM) is used increasingly in thyroid surgery to prevent recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) injury, despite lack of definitive evidence. This study analysed the United Kingdom Registry of Endocrine and Thyroid Surgery (UKRETS) to investigate whether IONM reduced the incidence of RLN injury.
Methods
UKRETS data were extracted on 28 July 2018. Factors related to risk of RLN palsy, such as age, sex, retrosternal goitre, reoperation, use of energy devices, extent of surgery, nodal dissection and IONM, were analysed. Data with missing entries for these risk factors were excluded. Outcomes of patients who had preoperative and postoperative laryngoscopy were analysed.
Results
RLN palsy occurred in 4.9 per cent of thyroidectomies. The palsy was temporary in 64.6 per cent and persistent in 35.4 per cent of patients. In multivariable analysis, IONM reduced the risk of RLN palsy (odds ratio (OR) 0.63, 95 per cent confidence interval (CI) 0.54 to 0.74, P < 0.001) and persistent nerve palsy (OR 0.47, 0.37 to 0.61, P < 0.001). Outpatient laryngoscopy was also associated with a reduced incidence of RLN palsy (OR 0.50, 0.37 to 0.67, P < 0.001). Bilateral RLN palsy occurred in 0.3 per cent. Reoperation (OR 12.30, 2.90 to 52.10, P = 0.001) and total thyroidectomy (OR 6.52, 1.50 to 27.80; P = 0.010) were significantly associated with bilateral RLN palsy.
Conclusion
The use of IONM is associated with a decreased risk of RLN injury in thyroidectomy. These results based on analysis of UKRETS data support the routine use of RLN monitoring in thyroid surgery.
Based on analysis of United Kingdom Registry of Endocrine and Thyroid Surgery data, recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) palsy occurred in 4.9 per cent of thyroidectomies. RLN monitoring reduced the risk of overall RLN palsy (odds ratio (OR) 0.63, 95 per cent CI 0.54 to 0.74; P <0.001) and persistent RLN palsy (OR 0.47, 0.37 to 0.61; P <0.001) in multivariable analysis. These results support the routine use of RLN monitoring in thyroid surgery.
IONM reduces RLN
Purpose
The delivery of surgical care in England has seen a momentum towards centralisation within larger volume hospitals and surgical teams. The aim of this study was to investigate outcomes in England in relationship to hospital and surgeon annual volumes for total thyroidectomy.
Methods
Data were extracted from the Hospital Episodes Statistics (HES) database for England. A 6-year period (April 2012–March 2018 inclusive) for all adult admissions for thyroidectomy was used in the analysis. The primary outcome measure used was a length of hospital stay greater than 2 days or an emergency readmission within 30 days following surgery. This was used as a proxy for surgical complications. A multilevel modelling strategy was used to adjust for hierarchy and potentially confounding.
Results
Data for 22,823 total thyroidectomies across 144 hospital trusts were used for analysis. For total thyroidectomy, larger volume surgeons had reduced levels of post-surgical complications; length of stay > 2 and > 4 days; emergency readmission at 30 days; and hypoparathyroidism, vocal cord palsy, stridor, and tracheostomy at 1-year post-surgery. Larger hospital volume was associated with lower levels of emergency readmission at 30 days and hypoparathyroidism at 1 year.
Conclusions
There is significant correlation between surgeon volume and clinical outcome for total thyroidectomy. The relationship was approximately linear, and a low-volume threshold could not be defined.
Supplementary Information
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s00423-021-02223-8.
This report presents the case of a 73-year-old woman who was admitted with sepsis, cachexia and confusion secondary to a strangulated femoral hernia containing both the appendix (De Garengeot hernia) and a Meckel's diverticulum (Littre's hernia). She underwent successful operative management and was discharged from hospital on the 10th post-operative day. This is the first report in the literature of a combined De Garengeot and Littre's hernia within a femoral hernia sac.
IntroductionHypoxic stress is a feature of rapidly growing thyroid tumours. Cancer progression is thought to be driven by a small population of tumour cells possessing stem cell properties. Hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) are important mediators of hypoxia. Both HIF-1alpha and HIF-2alpha have been reported to be expressed in thyroid cancers. There is growing evidence that the HIF pathway plays a significant role in the maintenance of thyroid cancer stem cells (CSC).MethodologyWe have isolated thyroid CSC from a papillary thyroid cancer-derived cell line (BCPAP) and an anaplastic thyroid cancer-derived cell line (SW1736) as side population (SP) cells (a putative stem cell population) and treated them with cobalt chloride (II) to induce hypoxia.Results and discussionWe observed an increase in the SP of cells within the thyroid cancer cell lines following induction of hypoxia.
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