Summary
Parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) is a major cause of hypercalcemia in malignancy
and serum levels are elevated in many patients suffering from this syndrome. In 10
patients with hypercalcemia of malignancy the levels of the midregional fragment of
PTHrP in serum were determined by radioimmunoassay over 7 days during a calcium-lowering
treatment with a single dose of the bisphosphonate BM 21.0955. PTHrP concentrations
remained unchanged 6 days after administration of the drug as compared with pretherapeutic
values, thus apparently excluding an effect of either the drug itself or the rapid
fall in serum calcium on the release of PTHrP by the tumors or on its clearance from
the circulation. In the patients with elevated midregional PTHrP levels (n = 6), the
calcium-lowering effect of the drug was significantly less pronounced than in patients
with normal PTHrP (n = 4) (mean serum calcium of 2.89 vs. 2.51 mmol/1 at day 6), despite
similar pretherapeutic concentrations. Of the six patients with elevated PTHrP, five
were still hypercalcemic, whereas in the group with normal PTHrP one out of four patients
remained hypercalcemic. In conclusion, PTHrP levels in hypercalcemia of malignancy
remained unchanged after calcium-lowering therapy with bisphosphonates. High serum
PTHrP levels were, however, predictive of a lesser effectiveness of the drug in lowering
serum calcium.
Key words
Hypercalcemia of Malignancy - Parathyroid Hormone-Related Protein - PTHrP - Serum
Calcium - Bisphosphonates - BM 21.0955