Thyroid surgery in the elderly: a surgical cohort

Langenbecks Arch Surg. 2023 Jun 29;408(1):254. doi: 10.1007/s00423-023-02982-6.

Abstract

Purpose: The need for thyroid surgery in the elderly is rising due to an ageing population, the liberal use of imaging studies, and the increasing prevalence of thyroid nodules and cancer with age. Data on surgical outcomes in this population are scarce and conflicting, but essential to assess safety of short-stay surgery. This study aims to compare surgical outcomes by age.

Methods: All consecutive patients undergoing thyroid surgery from January 2010 to July 2021 in a large tertiary referral centre for endocrine surgery were included in this surgical cohort. The indication for surgery, surgical morbidity (hypocalcaemia, bleeding, recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) palsy), and length of hospital stay were assessed in three age groups (young: 18-64y, older: 65-74y, and the elderly: 75 years and older).

Results: A total of 2,030 patients (1,499 young, 370 older, and 161 elderly) were included. The indication for surgery was significantly different, with the main indications in the elderly being multinodular goitre (70.2% vs. 47.7% in young patients) and thyroid cancer (9.9% vs. 7.0%). Reintervention for bleeding was more often required in the older (4.6%) and the elderly (2.5%) patients (vs. 1.4%). There was no difference in the proportion of hypocalcaemia or RLN palsy. The length of hospital stay was significantly longer in the elderly (length of stay longer than one day 43.5% vs. 9.8%).

Conclusion: Thyroid surgery in patients aged 75 years and older is a safe procedure with morbidity comparable to younger patients. However, the risk of reintervention for bleeding is higher, rendering ambulatory surgery not advisable.

Trial registration: Researchregistry6182 on October 29th 2020, retrospectively registered.

Keywords: Bleeding; Elderly; Hypocalcaemia; Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy; Surgical outcome; Thyroid surgery.

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Humans
  • Hypocalcemia*
  • Thyroid Neoplasms* / surgery
  • Thyroid Nodule*
  • Vocal Cord Paralysis* / epidemiology
  • Vocal Cord Paralysis* / etiology
  • Vocal Cord Paralysis* / surgery