| Literature DB >> 28138323 |
Ejigayehu G Abate1, Bart L Clarke2.
Abstract
Hypoparathyroidism is a rare endocrine disorder in which parathyroid hormone (PTH) production is abnormally low or absent, resulting in low serum calcium and increased serum phosphorus. The most common cause of hypoparathyroidism is parathyroid gland injury or inadvertent removal during thyroid surgery. Current treatments include supplementation with calcium and active vitamin D, with goal albumin-corrected serum calcium level in the low-normal range of 8-9 mg/dl. Complications of the disease include renal dysfunction, nephrocalcinosis, kidney stones, extracellular calcifications of the basal ganglia, and posterior subcapsular cataracts, as well as low bone turnover and increased bone density. Until January 2015, hypoparathyroidism was the only classic endocrine disease without an available hormone replacement. Recombinant human PTH 1-84, full-length PTH, is now available for a selected group of patients with the disease who are not well controlled on the current standard therapy of calcium and active vitamin D. In addition, the role of PTH replacement on quality of life, intracerebral calcifications, cataracts, improving bone turnover, and reduction of renal complications of the disease remains to be further investigated.Entities:
Keywords: PTH (1-84); hypocalcemia; hypoparathyroidism; natpara; parathyroid hormone
Year: 2017 PMID: 28138323 PMCID: PMC5237638 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2016.00172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Inherited causes of hypoparathyroidism.
| Disease | Inheritance | Gene/protein | Chromosomal abnormalities | Associated findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Autoimmune polyglandular syndrome type 1 (APS-1) | Autoimmune recessive | AIRE gene mutation | 21q22.3 | Addison’s disease, pernicious anemia, diabetes mellitus type I, hypoparathyroidism, candidiasis, primary hypogonadism, autoimmune thyroid disease, alopecia, vitiligo |
| DiGeorge type I | Autosomal dominant | TBX1, NEBL | 22q1.2/tbx1 | Conotruncal abnormalities, abnormal facies, thymic aplasia, cleft palate, hypocalcemia, immunodeficiency, congenital heart defect, deformities of the ear, nose, and mouth |
| CHARGE | Autosomal dominant | CHD7, SEMA3E | 8q12.1–q12.2,7q21.11 | Coloboma of the eye, heart malformation, choanal atresia, retardation of growth and development, and genital and ear abnormalities, gonadotropin deficiency, anosmia |
| Hereditary deafness and renal dysplasia syndrome (HDR) | Autosomal dominant | GATA3 | 10p14 | Deafness, renal dysplasia |
| Kenny–Caffey syndrome type I, Sanjad–Sakati syndrome | Autosomal dominant/recessive | TBCE | 1q42.3 | Short stature, osteosclerosis, cortical thickening of long bones, delayed anterior fontanel closure, basal ganglia calcification, hyperopia |
| Kenney–Caffey syndrome type 2 | Autosomal recessive | FAM111A | 11q12.1 | |
| Dubowitz syndrome | Autosomal recessive | Unknown | ? | Microcephaly, short stature, abnormal faces, and mild to severe mental retardation |
| Bartter syndrome type 5 | Autosomal dominant | CaSR | 3q21.1 | May be accompanied by hypokalemia and metabolic alkalosis |
| Nephropathy, nerve deafness | Autosomal dominant | Unknown | ? | |
| Nerve deafness without renal dysplasia | Autosomal dominant | Unknown | ? | |
| Kearns–Sayre syndrome | Maternal | Mitochondrial genome | ? | Muscle defect: ophthalmoplegia, proximal muscle weakness, bilateral pigmented retinopathy, cardiac conduction abnormality, cerebral ataxia, deafness, diabetes mellitus, growth hormone deficiency, short stature |
| Isolated hypoparathyroidism | Autosomal dominant | PTH, GCMB | 11p15,6p24.2 | |
| Autosomal recessive X-linked | SOX3 | Xq26–27 | ||
| ADH1 | Autosomal dominant | CaSR | 3q21.1 | Hypocalcemia, hypercalcuria, normal or low PTH, low magnesium |
| ADH2 | Autosomal dominant | GNA11 | 19p13 | |
AIRE, autoimmune regulator 1; GCM2, glial cell missing 2; CaSR, calcium-sensing receptor; TBX1, T-box 1; NEBL, nebulette; CHD7, chromodomain helicase DNA-binding protein 7; SEMA3E, semaphorin 3E; GATA3, GATA-binding protein 3; TBCE, tubulin folding cofactor E; FAM111A, family with sequence similarity 111 member A; GCMB, glial cell missing gene; SOX3, Sry-related HMG box; GNA11, G protein subunit alpha 11; ADH, autosomal dominant hypocalcemia; MELAS, mitochondrial encephalopathy, stroke like episodes and lactic acidosis; MTPDS, mitochondrial trifunctional protein deficiency syndrome; ?, unknown.
Calcium and vitamin D metabolites in the management of chronic hypoparathyroidism.
| Medication | Typical dose |
|---|---|
| Calcium carbonate | 1,000–9,000 mg elemental calcium/day in 2–4 divided doses |
| Calcium citrate | 1,000–9,000 mg elemental calcium/day in 2–4 divided doses |
| Ergocalciferol (D2) or cholecalciferol (D3) | Total 25-hydroxyvitamin D level ≥30 ng/ml |
| Calcitriol [1,25(OH)2D3] | 0.25–2.0 μg/day |
| Alfacalcidol (1-alphaOH-vitamin D3) | 0.5–4.0 μg/day (not available in U.S.) |
| Hydrochlorothiazide | 12.5–100 mg/day |
| Chlorthalidone | 25–100 mg/day longer duration |
| Indapamide | 1.25–5 mg/day |
| Amiloride | 5 mg daily (alone or combined with hydrochlorothiazide) |