Abstract

PurposeChronic hypoparathyroidism is usually treated with calcium and active vitamin D metabolites or analogs, despite the fact that their chronic use can lead to long-term complications. The use of hormone replacement therapy with PTH peptides [teriparatide and rhPTH (1–84)] has therefore been proposed. The main purpose of this study was to investigate the efficacy of teriparatide dose at 20 µg once or twice daily, in order to maintain normocalcemia reducing standard treatment, in adult patients with chronic hypoparathyroidism not well controlled with conventional treatment.MethodsThe study was a Phase III, open-label, non-comparative, clinical investigation (study period: 3 months), at a tertiary care clinical research center. Thirty patients with chronic hypoparathyroidism were screened, and 12 started teriparatide. After the optimization phase (0–4 weeks), calcium and calcitriol supplements were progressively reduced, while teriparatide 20 µg once daily was administered (5–7 weeks), and then could be titrated up to 20 µg twice daily (7–17 weeks). The main outcome measures included serum and urinary biochemical exams and Rand 36-Item Short Form Health Survey.ResultsThis study showed that teriparatide 20 µg once daily was insufficient to discontinue calcium and calcitriol supplements to maintain normal serum calcium concentrations. Conversely, for more than half of patients treated with teriparatide 20 µg twice daily, calcium and calcitriol administration was avoidable, but in some cases at the expense of serum calcium and phosphate oscillations.ConclusionsSince intervention trials evaluating the efficacy and safety of teriparatide in hypoparathyroid patients are not yet available, the routine use of this molecule poses some doubts.

Highlights

  • Conventional treatment of chronic hypoparathyroidism (HypoPT) consists of calcium supplements and active vitamin D metabolites or analogs, whose chronic use at high doses can lead to long-term complications [1,2,3,4]

  • It was demonstrated that twice-daily injections of synthetic human PTH (1–34) (0.5 μg/kg·dose) allowed good control of serum calcium levels as compared to conventional therapy, without exhibiting a significant reduction in Endocrine (2021) 72:249–259

  • Thirty patients with chronic HypoPT were screened, 19 patients were eligible, according to inclusion and exclusion criteria, with the remaining 11 patients considered as screening failure

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Summary

Introduction

Conventional treatment of chronic hypoparathyroidism (HypoPT) consists of calcium supplements and active vitamin D metabolites or analogs, whose chronic use at high doses can lead to long-term complications [1,2,3,4]. The studies, which employed synthetic human PTH (1–34) in small samples of adult and pediatric patients with various HypoPT forms, included randomized open-label and crossover trials [10, 11, 14, 15]. In these studies, it was demonstrated that twice-daily injections of synthetic human PTH (1–34) (0.5 μg/kg·dose) allowed good control of serum calcium levels as compared to conventional therapy, without exhibiting a significant reduction in Endocrine (2021) 72:249–259

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