Parathyroid hormone and parathyroid hormone‐related protein in the investigation of hypercalcaemia in two hospital populations

1994 
Summary BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE Parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) produced by cancers has a central role as a humoral mediator of hypercalcaemia in patients with malignancy. Since the prevalences of hypercalcaemia of malignancy and parathyroid disease reflect the population studied, hypercalcaemia patients from a district general hospital (DGH) and an oncology centre (OC) were studied in order to assess the diagnostic role of assays for serum PTH and plasma PTHrP in different clinical settings. DESIGN A prospective study of consecutive patients presenting with their first episode of hypercalcaemia during an 18-month period. PATIENTS A total of 123 patients (DGH, n= 69; OC, n= 54) had corrected serum calcium concentrations > 2·65mmol/l. MEASUREMENTS PTH, PTHrP, calcium and albumin were measured together with urine calcium and creatinine, enabling fractional calcium excretion to be assessed. Urine cyclic adenosine monophosphate was also measured. RESULTS Hypercalcaemia was attributed to malignancy alone in 72 patients (DGH, n= 20; OC, n= 52), benign causes in 42 (DGH, n= 42) and parathyroid disease coexisting with malignancy in 9 (DGH, n = 7; OC, n= 2). Plasma PTHrP levels were increased in 59/72 (82%) patients with hypercalcaemia due to malignancy. Measurements of both analytes contributed to a change in the final diagnosis in 12 patients (10%). Thus serum PTH was Increased In seven patients with parathyroid disease coexisting with malignancy, and plasma PTHrP was increased in five patients with previous undiagnosed malignancy. Median survival for patients with parathyroid disease and coexisting malignancy was 13 months compared with 3 months for those with hypercalcaemia due to malignancy alone (P < 0.02). CONCLUSIONS Since hypercalcaemia was attributable to parathyroid disease In 10% of ail patients with malignancy we advise measurement of serum PTH at the Initial presentation of hypercalcaemia in ail patients, while plasma PTHrP may be useful to identify those patients in whom malignancy may not be clinically apparent, or coexist with primary hyperparathyroidism.
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