Does Preoperative Calcium and Calcitriol Decrease Rates of Post Thyroidectomy Hypocalcemia?

Does Preoperative Calcium and Calcitriol Decrease Rates of Post Thyroidectomy Hypocalcemia?

Description
Description

The main objective of this study is to determine if treating patients with calcitriol and calcium prior to thyroidectomy decreases postoperative hypocalcemia. The primary outcome to be measured is clinical hypocalcemia, defined as peri-oral numbness and/or tingling, numbness and/or tingling in fingers, tetany, seizures, hypotension, palpitations. A secondary outcome measure of biochemical hypocalcemia will be measured. Biochemical hypocalcemia will be defined as a corrected calcium for albumin of less than 8.5 at 8 hours, 1 day, and 3 days postoperatively. Additional secondary outcome measures will be hospital length of stay, need for calcium gluconate IV supplementation, need for additional calcium monitoring.

Postoperative hypocalcemia is the most common complication after thyroidectomy. Symptoms range from perioral numbness/tingling and tingling in fingers to severe complications such as hypotension, arrhythmias and tetany. In prior studies hypocalcemia after thyroidectomy can occur up to 50% of the time. A retrospective cohort study from 2017 shows that treating patients with vitamin D and calcium preoperatively decreases the rate of postoperative hypocalcemia. Preoperative treatment in that study included calcitriol 0.25mcg PO BID and Tums 1,500mg PO TID starting 5 days before surgery. This showed a significant decrease in postoperative hypocalcemia, decreased hospital stay, and overall decrease in cost for patients undergoing total thyroidectomy. This study was limited by its retrospective and observational nature. By performing a prospective randomized study on preoperative supplementation the investigators hope to provide a stronger level of evidence to support this practice.