4.6 Article

Vitamin D therapy in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism and hypovitaminosis D

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 161, Issue 1, Pages 189-193

Publisher

BIOSCIENTIFICA LTD
DOI: 10.1530/EJE-08-0901

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Objective: TO determine whether vitamin D repletion of patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) and vitamin D deficiency or insufficiency (hypovitaminosis D) has deleterious clinical and/or biochemical effects. Design: Prospective audit of the effect of vitamin D repletion oil biochemical data in 56 patients with PHPT. Patients were treated with 50 000 units of vitamin D-2 weekly for 8 weeks with biochemical measurements at 5 and 10 weeks, and subsequently after 12 weeks on 800 units of vitamin D-3 daily, and in those with hypovitaminosis D after 12 weeks of up to 100 000 units of vitamin D-2 monthly. Methods: Serum calcium albumin, phosphorus, 25-OHD, intact parathyroid hormone (PTH) and urine calcium/creatinine (Ca/Cr) ratios were measured before and during vitamin D therapy. Results: Patients treated with 50 000 units of vitamin D-2 weekly for 8 weeks resulted in a significant increase in serum 25-OHD levels from 36.4 to 89.4 nmol/l at 5 weeks (P<0.0001) and 88.6 nmol/l at 10 weeks (P<0.0001). There were no significant changes in serum calcium. At 10 weeks, there was a non-significant decrease in serum PTH and in urine Ca/Cr ratios. None of the patients developed any calcium-related adverse events. Subsequently, patients with subnormal 25-OHD levels on 800 units of vitamin D daily were treated for the next 12 weeks with up to 100 000 units of vitamin D-2 monthly with normalization of serum 25-OHD in all but 4 patients. Conclusion: These data fail to demonstrate any adverse effects of vitamin D repletion in PHPT.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available