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How does thyroidectomy for benign thyroid disease impact upon quality of life? A prospective study
Background Choosing which patients to recommend surgery for benign thyroid conditions can be difficult due to the subjective nature of compressive thyroid and hormonal symptoms. The aim of this prospective study was to analyse changes in quality of life (QOL) following thyroid surgery using a valida...
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Published in: | ANZ journal of surgery 2020-12, Vol.90 (12), p.E177-E182 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Background
Choosing which patients to recommend surgery for benign thyroid conditions can be difficult due to the subjective nature of compressive thyroid and hormonal symptoms. The aim of this prospective study was to analyse changes in quality of life (QOL) following thyroid surgery using a validated disease‐specific assessment tool, the thyroid‐related patient‐reported outcome (ThyPRO) questionnaire.
Methods
Participants undergoing elective thyroid surgery for benign conditions were recruited. Patient demographics and clinical data were collected. ThyPRO consists of 85 questions grouped into 13 physical, mental and social symptom domains. Patients completed a ThyPRO questionnaire pre‐operatively and at 6 weeks and 6 months post‐operatively. ThyPRO items were scored according to protocol to produce 13 subscales. Repeated measures linear models with no random effects were performed using data for each outcome.
Results
Results were available for a total of 72 patients. The sample was predominately female (n = 63, 88%) with average age 49.8 years. The majority of patients underwent surgery for multi‐nodular goitre. At 6 weeks post‐operatively, significant improvement was demonstrated in the goitre, hypothyroid, hyperthyroid and anxiety symptom domains. At 6 months post‐operatively, significant improvement was demonstrated in all but four domains. No domains demonstrated significant increase in impairment post‐operatively.
Conclusion
Patients had significant improvement in nine of 13 symptom domains following surgery. Patients did not experience a negative impact on QOL following surgery. Further studies with larger patient cohorts may be able to identify potential pre‐operative predictive factors for a post‐operative improvement in QOL for benign thyroid disease.
Use of validated quality of life questionnaire (ThyPRO) to assess quality of life following benign thyroid surgery in an Australian population. |
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ISSN: | 1445-1433 1445-2197 |
DOI: | 10.1111/ans.16342 |