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RECRUITING
NCT06765941
NA

PTeye vs Surgeons Eyes in Intraoperative Identification and Functional Preservation of Parathyroid Glands During Thyroid Surgery: A Parallel Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial.

Sponsor: Marcin Barczynski

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The goal of this randomized clinical trial is to learn if there are any added benefits of using near-infrared autofluorescence (NIRAF) probe-based imaging system (the PTeye) for intraoperative identification of parathyroid glands (PGs) during thyroid surgery in comparison to visual identification of PGs by the surgeon's naked eyes without PTeye. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Is number of PGs identified intraoperatively and preserved in situ larger in thyroid operations with PTeye versus surgeon's naked eyes without PTeye? * Is number of patients with undetectable or low parathormone serum level on postoperative day 1 fewer in thyroid operations with PTeye versus surgeon's naked eyes without PTeye? * Is number of patients requiring substitution therapy with calcium and vitamin D analogue fewer after thyroid operations with PTeye versus surgeon's naked eyes without PTeye in a short-term (\< 6 weeks) and/or in a long-term (at 6 months) follow-up? * Is numer of inadvertenly removed and reimplanted PGs fewer in thyroid operations with PTeye versus surgeon's naked eyes without PTeye? * Is number of frozen sections fewer in thyroid operations with PTeye versus surgeon's naked eyes without PTeye? * Is number of PGs identified by pathologist in the surgical specimen fewer in in thyroid operations with PTeye versus surgeon's naked eyes without PTeye? * Is number of patients with symptomatic hypoparathyroidism within 30 days of the operation fewer in thyroid operations with PTeye versus surgeon's naked eyes without PTeye? The hypothesis explored in this study is that use of PTeye in comparison to the surgeon's naked eyes may be beneficial for intraoperative identification and preservation of PGs in thyroid surgery leading to reduced risk of postoperative hypoparathyroidism. A prospective, randomized study with 2 arms: use of PTeye vs. visual identification of PGs without PTeye (n=77 patients, each). The primary outcome measure is number of intraoperatively identified PGs with use of PTeye vs without it.

Official title: Clinical Validation of Probe-based Parathyroid Autofluorescence Detection System PTeye vs Surgeons Eyes in Intraoperative Identification and Functional Preservation of Parathyroid Glands During Thyroid Surgery: A Parallel Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

154

Start Date

2025-08-23

Completion Date

2026-06-30

Last Updated

2025-09-02

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

Probe-based near-infrared parathyroid autofluorescence detection system

The surgeon will use the PTeye as an intraoperative tool to identify whether a suspect tissue is parathyroid or not during the surgery. The surgeon will first take five baseline NIRAF measurements on the thyroid gland (or neck muscle, if thyroid is absent), to establish a reference point for subsequent measurements, using the disposable sterile fiber probe that is connected to the PTeye console, as per device functionality requirements. The subsequent step involves touching the target tissue in the neck with the fiber optic probe, after which the PTeye will indicate to the surgeon whether the tissue is parathyroid or not. Parameters displayed on the PTeye console - Baseline values, Detection Intensity, Parathyroid Detection Ratio - will be recorded for each patient in the study arm. PTeye indicates that a tissue is parathyroid if the 'Parathyroid Detection Ratio' is greater than 1.2. The rest of the surgical procedure will follow the standard protocol.

PROCEDURE

Surgeons naked eyes for parathyroid glands identification

The surgeons will not use the probe-based near-infrared parathyroid autofluorescence detection system and will proceed with the procedure as usual, relying on their surgical experience to identify parathyroid glands. At the end of the procedure, the thyroid specimen will be evaluated visually to search for inadvertently resected parathyroid glands. If this is the case, these parathyroid glands will be reimplanted in the sternocleidomastoid muscle, following standard protocol.

Locations (1)

Department of Endocrine Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Jagiellonian University Medical College

Krakow, Małopolska, Poland