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Title: | Parathyroid hormone and phosphate homeosTaşis in patients with Bartter and Gitelman syndrome: an international cross-sectional study | Authors: | Verploegen, Maartje F. A. Vargas-Poussou, Rosa Walsh, Stephen B. Alpay, Harika Amouzegar, Atefeh Ariceta, Gema Atmis, Bahriye Bacchetta, Justine Barany, Peter Baron, Stephanie Bayrakci, Umut Selda Belge, Hendrica Besouw, Martine Blanchard, Anne Bokenkamp, Arend Boyer, Olivia Burgmaier, Kathrin Calo, Lorenzo A. Decramer, Stephane Devuyst, Olivier van Dyck, Maria Ferraro, Pietro Manuel Fila, Marc Francisco, Telma Ghiggeri, Gian Marco Gondra, Leire Guarino, Stefano Hooman, Nakysa Hoorn, Ewout J. Houillier, Pascal Kamperis, Konstantinos Kari, Jameela A Konrad, Martin Levtchenko, Elena Lucchetti, Laura Lugani, Francesca Marzuillo, Pierluigi Mohidin, Barian Neuhaus, Thomas J. Osman, Abdaldafae Papizh, Svetlana Perello, Manel Rookmaaker, Maarten B. Conti, Valerie Said Santos, Fernando Sawaf, Ghalia Serdaroglu, Erkin Santos, Fernando Szczepanska, Maria Taroni, Francesca Topaloglu, Rezan Trepiccione, Francesco Vidal, Enrico Wan, Elizabeth R. Weber, Lutz. Yildirim, Zeynep Yuruk Yuksel, Selcuk Zlatanova, Galia Bockenhauer, Detlef Emma, Francesco Nijenhuis, Tom |
Keywords: | Bartter syndrome Gitelman syndrome parathyroid hormone phosphate salt losing tubulopathies Hyperparathyroidism Hypercalciuria Calcium Gene |
Publisher: | Oxford Univ Press | Abstract: | Background Small cohort studies have reported high parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels in patients with Bartter syndrome and lower serum phosphate levels have anecdotally been reported in patients with Gitelman syndrome. In this cross-sectional study, we assessed PTH and phosphate homeosTaşis in a large cohort of patients with salt-losing tubulopathies. Methods Clinical and laboratory data of 589 patients with Bartter and Gitelman syndrome were provided by members of the European Rare Kidney Diseases Reference Network (ERKNet) and the European Society for Paediatric Nephrology (ESPN). Results A total of 285 patients with Bartter syndrome and 304 patients with Gitelman syndrome were included for analysis. Patients with Bartter syndrome type I and II had the highest median PTH level (7.5 pmol/L) and 56% had hyperparathyroidism (PTH >7.0 pmol/L). Serum calcium was slightly lower in Bartter syndrome type I and II patients with hyperparathyroidism (2.42 versus 2.49 mmol/L; P = .038) compared to those with normal PTH levels and correlated inversely with PTH (r(s) -0.253; P = .009). Serum phosphate and urinary phosphate excretion did not correlate with PTH. Overall, 22% of patients had low serum phosphate levels (phosphate-standard deviation score < -2), with the highest prevalence in patients with Bartter syndrome type III (32%). Serum phosphate correlated with tubular maximum reabsorption of phosphate/glomerular filtration rate (TmP/GFR) (r(s) 0.699; P < .001), suggesting renal phosphate wasting. Conclusions Hyperparathyroidism is frequent in patients with Bartter syndrome type I and II. Low serum phosphate is observed in a significant number of patients with Bartter and Gitelman syndrome and appears associated with renal phosphate wasting. | URI: | https://doi.org/10.1093/ndt/gfac029 https://hdl.handle.net/11499/50414 |
ISSN: | 0931-0509 1460-2385 |
Appears in Collections: | PubMed İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / PubMed Indexed Publications Collection Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection Tıp Fakültesi Koleksiyonu WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / WoS Indexed Publications Collection |
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