Abstract

Background: Hereditary Hypophosphatemic Rickets with Hypercalciuria (HHRH) is a rare condition of phosphate wasting due to variants in the SLC34A3 gene, encoding the sodium-phosphate cotransporter 2c (NaPi2c) at the brush border of proximal renal tubular cells (1). While labs are characterized by low serum phosphorus, high 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D and inappropriately high levels of urine phosphate and calcium, the presenting symptoms can vary widely. Little remains known about specific phenotype-genotype correlations, especially in children. Clinical Cases: We report three new cases of HHRH in an unrelated 12 year-old male, 9 year-old female and 14 year-old male. All three patients were found to have low serum phosphorus for age (2.9-3.2 mg/dL), normocalcemia (9.4-9.9 mg/dL), low to low-normal parathyroid hormone (7-15 pg/mL), elevated 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D (91-178 pg/mL), and hypercalciuria (4.5-7.6 mg/kg/day). Urine phosphorus was inappropriately elevated given the degree of their hypophosphatemia. Despite having similar lab findings, however, their clinical presentations were varied. The 12 year-old male presented with lower extremity pain, which was previously ascribed to patellofemoral pain syndrome. He had no history of renal symptoms, though a renal ultrasound later identified stones bilaterally. Conversely, the 9 year-old female and 14 year-old male presented with recurrent urinary stones and no bone symptoms. Genetic analyses identified 4 novel SLC34A3 gene mutations. Of interest, the 12 year-old male and 9 year-old female each shared a variant (c.575C-T (p.Ser192Leu)) despite having disparate symptoms. All three patients were treated with phosphorus supplementation and were advised to discontinue Vitamin D, if this had previously been prescribed. Conclusion: These three cases highlight the variability of presenting signs and symptoms among individuals with HHRH. Obtaining an accurate diagnosis is critical, as the addition of Vitamin D can seriously worsen symptoms in HHRH though it is a commonly used treatment for other disorders of phosphate wasting and bone demineralization. To aid in clinical decision making, we present a stepwise approach to the diagnosis of hypophosphatemic diseases.

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