Abstract
Abstract Background: Hypercalcemia may result from the activation of macrophages in granulomatous diseases with increased production of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D/calcitriol. Its occurrence in patients with human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) infection may be atypical and signal major changes in immune status. We report on a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) presenting with new-onset hypercalcemia after months of treatment for mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) infection and normal calcitriol levels. Clinical Case: A 37-year-old man on treatment for HIV-1 and disseminated MAC infection presented to the hospital 6 months after initial diagnosis with worsening headache, cough, and abdominal pain. On arrival he was afebrile and without palpable lymphadenopathy. He was found to have a high serum calcium (13.4 mg/dL, n 8.6–10.6 mg/dL) and acute kidney injury (AKI) (creatinine 4 mg/dL, n 0.6–1.25 mg/dL). His CD4 count had increased from 24 at time of diagnosis to 162 cells/μL (n 410–1,590 cells/μL); his HIV viral load was undetectable. Workup for hypercalcemia revealed an elevated phosphorus (5.2 mg/dL, n 2.5–5.0 mg/dL), low 25-OH vitamin D level (<13 ng/mL, n 25–80 ng/dL), low PTH (4.8 pg/mL, n 12–88 pg/mL), and calcitriol level of 31.4 pg/mL, n 19.9–73.3 pg/mL). Additional tests, including serum electrophoresis, thyroid stimulating hormone, and parathyroid hormone-related peptide levels, were unremarkable. The patient was diagnosed with hypercalcemia secondary to dysregulated calcitriol production in the setting of disseminated MAC and possible immune reconstitution. Hypercalcemia resolved with hydration and prednisone 20 mg daily. Patient was discharged with an 8-day prednisone taper, but readmitted to the hospital 3 weeks later with recurrent hypercalcemia (13.8 mg/dL) and AKI. Urine calcium was found to be elevated (484 mg/24 hours, n100-300 mg/24 hours) and repeat calcitriol was 53.6 pg/ml. Patient was restarted on prednisone 40 mg daily with normalization of calcium within 5 days (calcium 10.3 mg/dL). Conclusion: Hypercalcemia due to increased calcitriol production in the setting of MAC infection, an AIDS-defining illness, may occur months after initiation of effective antibiotic and antiviral therapy and could represent a manifestation of immune reconstitution. The deleterious effects of excess calcitriol may be present even in patients with chronic vitamin D deficiency and a calcitriol level that inappropriately remains within the normal range.
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