| Literature DB >> 29181374 |
Claire Hoyoux1, Jacques Lombet2, Corina Ramona Nicolescu3.
Abstract
Hypercalcemia in children is a rare metabolic finding. The clinical picture is usually non-specific, and the etiology includes several entities (metabolic, nutritional, drug-induced, inflammatory, cancer-associated, or genetic) depending on the age at presentation, but severe hypercalcemia is associated mainly with malignancy in childhood and sepsis in neonates. Severe parathyroid hormone (PTH)-suppressed hypercalcemia is challenging and requires multidisciplinary diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to (i) confirm or rule out a malignant cause, (ii) treat it and its potentially dangerous complications. We report a case of severe and complicated PTH-independent hypercalcemia in a symptomatic 3-year-old boy. His age, severity of hypercalcemia and its complicated course, and the first imaging reports were suggestive of malignancy. The first bone and kidney biopsies and bone marrow aspiration were normal. The definitive diagnosis was a malignant-induced hypercalcemia, and we needed 4 weeks to assess other differential diagnoses and to confirm, on histopathological and immunochemical base, the malignant origin of hypercalcemia. Using this case as an illustrative example, we suggest a diagnostic approach that underlines the importance of repeated histology if the clinical suspicion is malignancy-induced hypercalcemia. Effective treatment is required acutely to restore calcium levels and to avoid complications.Entities:
Keywords: bone lymphoma; hypercalcemia; malignancy; parathyroid hormone; parathyroid hormone-related peptide
Year: 2017 PMID: 29181374 PMCID: PMC5693871 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2017.00233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
From admission to diagnosis—biochemical, radiological, and histological evolution.
| Variables and reference range | ED laboratories | Laboratories and radiology on 1st week | Laboratories on 2nd week | Laboratories and radiology on 3rd week | Laboratories on 4th week/diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blood count | Normal, no peripheral blasts | Normal, no peripheral blasts | Normal, no peripheral blasts | Normal, no peripheral blasts | Normal, no peripheral blasts |
| Acid–base balance | pH 7.44 | pH 7.45 | |||
| Total serum calcium (2.1–2.6 mmol/L) | 4.57 | 4.16–4.68 | 2 | 3 | |
| Ionized calcium (1.2–1.3 mmol/L) | 2.33 | 2.53 | 1.76 | 2.11 | |
| Parathyroid hormone (15–65 ng/mL) | 5 | 8 | |||
| Parathyroid hormone-related peptide (<20 pg/mL) | <20 | <20 | |||
| Vitamin D (≥30 ng/mL) | 8 | 14 | |||
| 1,25(OH)2D (20–80 pg/mL) | 6.3 | 7.5 | |||
| Tumor markers (CRP, LDH, hCG, αFP, and NSE) | Negative | Negative | Negative | ||
| Abdominal X-ray | Multiple osteolytic lesions (iliac bones and ribs) | ||||
| Abdominal US | Bilateral homogenous nephromegaly (longitudinal diameter 9 cm) | ||||
| Thorax and abdominal CT | Multiple radiolucent bone lesions | ||||
| Bone scintigraphy | Normal | ||||
| 18F-PET/scan | Normal | ||||
| Skeleton X-ray | Multiple lytic lesions Femoral fractures | ||||
| Biopsies | Bone marrow aspiration, kidney, and iliac lesions biopsy—normal | Knee lesions and bone marrow aspiration—lymphoblast infiltration |
CRP, C-reactive protein; LDH, lactic dehydrogenase; hCG, human chorionic gonadotropin; αFP, alpha-fetoprotein; NSE, neuron-specific enolase; 18F-PET/scan, .
Figure 1Skull radiograph—multiple lytic areas.
Figure 2Longitudinal evolution of calcemia.