Outcome of supplementation of vitamin D on intact parathyroid hormone level in chronic kidney disease patients

Authors

  • Laxman Prasad Adhikary Associate Professor, Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Kathmandu Medical College Teaching Hospital, Sinamangal, Kathmandu, Nepal.
  • Aarjan Khanal Resident, Department of Internal Medicine, Kathmandu Medical College Teaching Hospital, Sinamangal, Kathmandu, Nepal.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/jkmc.v8i2.28164

Keywords:

Chronic kidney disease; Intact parathyroid hormone; Vitamin D supplementation.

Abstract

Background: Secondary hyperparathyroidism is present in majority of patients with estimated glomerular filtrate rate less than 60 mL/min/1.73 m2. Sustained elevated parathyroid hormone level can cause osteitis-fibrosa-cystica, fracture, hypercalcemia, hyperphosphatemia, and calciphylaxis. Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcome guidelines for Chronic Kidney Disease Mineral and Bone Disorder 2017 recommends treatment with calcitriol or vitamin D analogue if parathyroid hormone level is progressively increasing and remains persistently above the upper limit despite correction of modifiable factors.

Objectives: The objective of this study was to determine the mean change in intact parathyroid hormone after
calcitriol supplementation in patients with chronic kidney disease (stage 3 to 5).

Methodology: This prospective observational study enrolled 92 patients with chronic kidney disease stage 3 to 5, not under maintenance hemodialysis. Patients who had intact parathyroid hormone level more than 200 pg/ml, serum phosphate level less than 4.5 mg/dl and corrected serum calcium less than 9.5 mg/dl were selected for the study. They were supplemented with oral calcitriol 0.25μg thrice weekly for three months and intact parathyroid hormone level was measured after three months.

Results: Mean intact parathyroid hormone level before supplementation was 332.91 ± 96.046pg/ml and after three months of supplementation with calcitriol was 176.49 ±53.764pg/ml. This finding was statistically significant (Correlation: 0.471, p-value less than 0.05). Thus, supplementation of calcitriol reduced the mean intact parathyroid hormone level in the chronic kidney disease patients in our study.

Conclusion: Calcitriol supplementation seems to be an effective measure to reduce intact parathyroid hormone level in chronic kidney disease patients when it remains persistently high despite correction of modifiable factors.

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Author Biography

Laxman Prasad Adhikary, Associate Professor, Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Kathmandu Medical College Teaching Hospital, Sinamangal, Kathmandu, Nepal.

Associate Professor

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Published

2019-06-30

How to Cite

Adhikary, L. P., & Khanal, A. (2019). Outcome of supplementation of vitamin D on intact parathyroid hormone level in chronic kidney disease patients. Journal of Kathmandu Medical College, 8(2), 51–54. https://doi.org/10.3126/jkmc.v8i2.28164

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Original Research Articles

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