Abstract

Parathyroid hormone (PTH) and fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) both influence blood phosphate levels by regulating urinary phosphate reabsorption. Clinical data suggest that adequate renal phosphate handling requires the presence of both FGF23 and PTH, but robust evidence is lacking. To investigate whether the phosphaturic effects of PTH and FGF23 are interdependent, 11 patients with hypoparathyroidism, which features high blood phosphate in spite of concomitant FGF23 elevation, and 1 patient with hyperphosphatemic familial tumoral calcinosis (HFTC), characterized by deficient intact FGF23 action and resulting hyperphosphatemia, were treated with synthetic human PTH 1-34 (hPTH 1-34). Biochemical parameters, including blood phosphate, calcium, intact FGF23 (iFGF23), nephrogenic cAMP, 1,25(OH)2 vitamin D (1,25D), and tubular reabsorption of phosphate (TRP), were measured at baseline and after hPTH 1-34 treatment. In patients with hypoparathyroidism, administration of hPTH 1-34 increased nephrogenic cAMP, which resulted in serum phosphate normalization followed by a significant decrease in iFGF23. TRP initially decreased and returned to baseline. In the patient with HFTC, hPTH 1-34 administration also increased nephrogenic cAMP, but this did not produce changes in phosphate or TRP. No changes in calcium were observed in any of the studied patients, although prolonged hPTH 1-34 treatment did induce supraphysiologic 1,25D levels in the patient with HFTC. Our results indicate that PTH and FGF23 effects on phosphate regulation are interdependent and both are required to adequately regulate renal phosphate handling. Published 2021. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.

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