Abstract
Fasting calcium excretion, renal phosphorus threshold, plasma 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D, immunoreactive PTH, nephrogenous cyclic AMP excretion, and tumor burden were assessed in nine patients with gynecologic neoplasms and hypercalcemia. Gynecologic neoplasms were responsible for hypercalcemia in seven of 34 (20.5%) consecutive patients with malignancy-associated hypercalcemia. The tumor burden in each patient was large. Three of four endometrial carcinomas contained squamous elements. All patients displayed biochemical evidence of nonparathyroid humorally mediated hypercalcemia (bone resorption). Treatment of hypercalcemia did not appear to diminish production of the humoral calcemic factor but eradication of tumor eliminated biochemical evidence of the humoral syndrome. It can be concluded that (1) gynecologic neoplasms are a frequent cause of malignancy-associated hypercalcemia, (2) humoral mechanisms appeared to be responsible for the hypercalcemia in 100% of the patients in this series, (3) squamous features occur with unexpected frequency in hypercalcemic endometrial carcinoma, (4) the presence of hypercalcemia connotes a large tumor burden, and (5) treatment directed at the neoplasm (but not treatment directed at hypercalcemia) may eliminate evidence of ectopic calcemic hormone production.
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