Abstract

Orthophosphate treatment of patients with idiopathic hypercalciuria reduces the urinary excretion of calcium. To examine the role of altered vitamin D metabolism in reducing the renal excretion of calcium, we studied 11 patients with idiopathic hypercalciuria before and after 2 weeks of treatment with oral neutral orthophosphate (2 g phosphorus/day). Variables measured were urine calcium and phosphorus and seseserum calcium, phosphorus, immunoreactive parathyroid hormone, and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D [1,25-(OH)2D]. Oral phosphate treatment significantly decreased urine calcium excretion [mean change (delta), -123 mg/24 h], increased urine phosphorus (mean delta, serum levels of 1,25-(OH)2D (mean delta, -22 pg/ml). Pretreatment levels of 1,25-(OH)2D were high when compared with levels in age-matched controls, whether assessed as the arithmetic mean (57 vs. 33 pg/ml; P < 0.025), the logarithmically normalized (42 vs. 27 pg/ml). Phosphate treatment decreased serum levels of 1,25-(OH)2D to a mean of 35 pg/ml (logarithmically normalized mean, 22 pg/ml; median, 21 pg/ml), values not significantly different from those of normal controls. Serum calcium and phosphorus concentrations were not changed by treatment. Serum immunoreactive parathyroid hormone values increased minimally within the normal range (mean delta, +2 microleq/ml; P <0.025). We conclude that the effect of oral phosphate therapy in decreasing urinary calcium excretion may involve the reduced synthesis of 1,25-(OH)2D, independent of altered parathyroid function.

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