Abstract
Primary hyperparathyroidism (HPT) is the leading cause of hypercalcemia in the outpatient setting, and it is treated primarily by parathyroidectomy. There are few nonsurgical treatment options for patients who do not wish to have surgery, who have failed surgery, or who have contraindications to surgery. Cinacalcet increases the sensitivity of parathyroid calcium-sensing receptors to extracellular calcium, thereby reducing serum calcium levels. We conducted a retrospective chart review from 2004 to 2006 to investigate the efficacy of cinacalcet in reducing serum total calcium, ionized calcium, and parathyroid hormone (PTH) in patients with primary HPT. Patients were started on cinacalcet if they met at least one indication for parathyroidectomy, which includes T score less than -2.5 standard deviations from the mean, serum calcium 1 mg/dL above the upper limit of normal, 24-hour urine calcium above 400 mg/dL, age less than 50 years, or a creatinine clearance that is 30% below age- and sex-matched controls. The primary outcome was normalization of serum calcium. A total of 18 patients with primary HPT were started on cinacalcet: 16 men and 2 women with a mean age of 70 years. Mean baseline serum calcium was 10.60 +/- .53 mg/dL; ionized serum calcium, 1.45 +/- .07 mmol/L; and serum PTH, 141 +/- 78 pg/mL. After treatment with cinacalcet, the mean serum calcium decreased to 9.46 +/- .34 mg/dL, ionized calcium decreased to 1.26 +/- .06 mmol/L, and PTH decreased to 108 +/- 64.5 pg/mL. Ninety-four percent of the patients on cinacalcet had normal total serum calcium, 81% had normal serum ionized calcium, whereas only 25% had a normal serum PTH level. Cinacalcet normalizes serum calcium in most patients while only modestly reducing serum PTH levels.
Collapse