1. [Cinacalcet impact on calcium homeostasis and bone remodeling in 13 renal transplanted patients with hyperparathyroidism and hypercalcaemia].
- Author
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Boulanger H, Haymann JP, Fouqueray B, Mansouri R, Metivier F, Mercadal L, Attaf D, Flamant M, and Glotz D
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Cinacalcet, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Bone Remodeling drug effects, Calcium physiology, Homeostasis drug effects, Hypercalcemia drug therapy, Hypercalcemia etiology, Hyperparathyroidism, Secondary complications, Kidney Transplantation, Naphthalenes pharmacology, Naphthalenes therapeutic use
- Abstract
The purpose of the study is to assess the impact of cinacalcet on calcium and bone remodeling, in post-renal transplanted patients with persistent hypercalcaemia secondary to hyperparathyroidism. Thirteen renal-transplanted adult recipients with a glomerular filtration rate over 30 ml/min/1.73 m(2), a total serum calcium>2.60 mmol/l with ionized calcium>1.31 mmol/l and a parathyroid hormone serum level over 70 pg/ml, were treated with cinacalcet for 4 months followed by a 15-day wash out. The results show that cinacalcet lowers significantly total and ionized calcium respectively from 2,73 (2,67-2,86) to 2,31 (2,26-2,37) mmol/l (P<0.05) and from 1,39 (1,37-1,47) to 1,21 (1,15-1,22) mmol/l (P<0.05) with no alteration of the 24-hour urine calcium/creatinine ratio and no significant expected PTH serum level suppression (153 [115-214,9] and 166 [122-174] pg/ml). On the other hand, fasting urine calcium was significantly decreased from 0,61 (0,27-1,02) to 0,22 (0,15-0,37) (P<0.05) and bone-specific alkaline phosphatases increased from 20,5 (13-46,6) to 33,8 (12-58,9) ng/ml, upon cinacalcet treatment. After its discontinuation, all these effects were reversible. In conclusion, cinacalcet normalizes total and ionized calcium in renal-transplanted recipients with hypercalcemia secondary to hyperparathyroidism through a mechanism that could be independent of PTH serum level suppression. The increase in bone-specific alkaline phosphatases, biochemical markers of bone accretion and the significant decrease in fasting urine calcium suggest the possibility of a beneficial impact of cinacalcet on bone remodeling., (Copyright © 2011 Association Société de néphrologie. Published by Elsevier SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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