Volume 15, Issue 1 pp. 24-28
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Surgery for parathyroid adenoma and hyperplasia: Relationship of histology to outcome

Dr. Shorland W. Hosking MD, FRCS

Corresponding Author

Dr. Shorland W. Hosking MD, FRCS

Department of Surgery, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, England

University Surgical Unit, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, SO1 6HU, EnglandSearch for more papers by this author
Hugh Jones MB ChB, BSc

Hugh Jones MB ChB, BSc

Department of Surgery, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, England

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Claire E. H. Du Boulay DM, MRCPath

Claire E. H. Du Boulay DM, MRCPath

Department of Histopathology, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, England

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Frances P. McGinn M Phil, MS, FRCS

Frances P. McGinn M Phil, MS, FRCS

Department of Histopathology, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, England

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First published: January/February 1993
Citations: 19

Abstract

Recent histopathologic evidence challenges the teaching that enlargement of a solitary parathyroid gland is invariably caused by an adenoma, whereas multiple gland enlargement results from hyperplasia. We have re-examined the parathyroid tissue obtained from 152 consecutive patients undergoing surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism and compared it with their clinical outcome. Our approach was to excise enlarged glands and biopsy the remainder. In 124 patients (82%) at least three glands were biopsied or removed. The ratio of adenoma to hyperplasia was reversed by our histologic re-examination; adenomas were found in only 27 patients (25 single, two double), whereas hyperplasia was found in 117 patients (one gland, 87 patients; two glands, 16 patients; three glands, five patients; four glands, nine patients). Normal tissue only was reported in eight patients. During a 2-year follow-up, five patients (3%) developed hypocalcemia and none developed recurrent hypercalcemia. Our results indicate that a full neck exploration with removal of all enlarged glands is more important than the histologic diagnosis in planning a successful surgical strategy for primary hyperparathyroidism.

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