Horm Metab Res 1984; 16(5): 258-261
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1014759
© Georg Thieme Verlag, Stuttgart · New York

Paradoxical Acute Hypercalcemic Effect of Salmon Calcitonin in Patients Having Paget's Disease of Bone after Treatment with Dichloromethylene Diphosphonate

P. D. Delmas, M. C. Chapuy, P. J. Meunier
  • INSERM Unit 234, Faculté Alexis Carrel, and Clinique de Rhumatologie, Lyon, France
Further Information

Publication History

1982

1983

Publication Date:
14 March 2008 (online)

Summary

The hypocalcemia following administration of calcitonin may be an index to disease activity in Paget's disease of bone. Therefore, we assessed the effect of a single injection of 100 MRC units of salmon calcitonin (SCT) on plasma calcium in 28 patients with active Paget's disease before and after 6 months of treatment with dichloromethylene diphosphonate (Cl2MDP) at a dose of 400 mg/day (3 patients), 800 mg/day (8 patients), 1.600 mg/day (9 patients) or 2.600 mg/day (8 patients). The mean SCT-induced hypocalcemia was reduced by Cl2MDP and there was a significant positive correlation between the decrease of serum calcium induced by SCT and bone resorption evaluated by the number of osteoclasts on bone biopsy taken in pagetic iliac crest.

After Cl2MCP treatment, 5 patients manifested a paradoxical hypercalcemic response to SCT injection ranging from +0.3 mg/dl to +0.5 mg/dl, which was sustained over the 9 hours following injection. As these patients had a dramatic inhibition of bone resorption induced by Cl2MDP, it is suggested that the hypercalcemic response to SCT might reflect persistence or exaggeration of the early hypercalcemic effect of CT which reportedly precedes the hypocalcemic response to SCT.