ECE2024 Eposter Presentations Calcium and Bone (102 abstracts)
Hospital Fernando Fonseca, Endocrinology, Amadora, Portugal
Background: Parathyroid carcinoma is a rare cause of primary hyperparathyroidism. Theres an overlap between benign and malignant disease clinical presentation, but the presence of very high calcium levels (>14 mg/dl), markedly raised levels of PTH, palpable neck mass or severe bone/kidney disease is more common in parathyroid carcinoma. We present a case of primary hyperparathyroidism due to a parathyroid carcinoma, with unusual presentation.
Case: A 75 years-old male was referred to the Endocrinology department to evaluate hypercalcemia, identified during the study of alithiasic acute pancreatitis. The patient had a previous history of pre-Diabetes, arterial hypertension and chronic kidney disease. During the previous hospitalization, a pancreatic mass and pelvis bone lesions were noticed in the abdominal CT. A FDG-PET was performed, with uptake at both locations. There was a suspicion of pancreatic malignant disease, with bone metastasis, but the bone biopsy was compatible with brown tumors and the pancreatic mass biopsy was benign. Laboratory tests showed a calcium level at presentation of 12.9 mg/dl (8.8-10.2), with a phosphate of 2.4 mg/dl (2.5-4.5), PTH level of 357 pg/ml (normal range 15-65) and an estimated glomerular filtration rate of 38 ml/min/1.73 m². After vigorous hydration and intravenous Pamidronate, a reduction of calcium to basal levels of 10.6 11.4 mg/dl was noticed in the following months. Primary hyperparathyroidism was assumed, with bone disease (brown tumors at pelvis) and kidney disease (lithiasis and chronic kidney disease). Cervical ultrasonography and CT showed a mixed nodule with 34×24×22 mm at the inferior pole of right thyroid lobe, concordant with sestamibi scintigraphy result. The patient had selective parathyroidectomy with a low normal intraoperative PTH level. Postoperatively, the patient had a low normal calcium/hypocalcemia, corrected with calcitriol and oral calcium. Histology was malignant (parathyroid carcinoma). Two years after surgery, the patient has normal calcium and phosphate and a secondary hyperparathyroidism due chronic kidney disease (latest laboratory results: calcium 9.2, phosphate 3.2, PTH 75, glomerular filtration rate of 28 ml/min/1.73m²) without signs of recurrence of the disease.
Discussion: Parathyroid carcinoma is a challenging entity, with various clinical presentations. In our case, calcium level at presentation (12.9 mg/dl), basal calcium after bisphosphonates (10.6-11.4) and PTH levels were not suspicious of malignant disease. However, the patient had severe target organ involvement chronic kidney disease, lithiasis, brown pelvis tumors and acute pancreatitis that are more frequent in malignant disease.