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      Long-term follow-up of patients with hypoparathyroidism.

      The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism
      Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Comorbidity, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Hypoparathyroidism, complications, epidemiology, metabolism, therapy, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult

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          Abstract

          Despite tremendous interest in hypoparathyroidism, large cohort studies describing typical treatment patterns, laboratory parameters, and rates of complications are lacking. Our objective was to characterize the course of disease in a large cohort of hypoparathyroid patients. We conducted a chart review of patients with permanent hypoparathyroidism identified via a clinical patient data registry. Patients were seen at a Boston tertiary-care hospital system between 1988 and 2009. We identified 120 patients. Diagnosis was confirmed by documented hypocalcemia with a simultaneous low or inappropriately normal PTH level for at least 1 yr. Mean age at the end of the observation period was 52 ± 19 (range 2-87) yr, and the cohort was 73% female. We evaluated serum and urine laboratory results and renal and brain imaging. We calculated time-weighted average serum calcium measurements for all patients. The time-weighted average for calcium was between 7.5 and 9.5 mg/dl for the majority (88%) of patients. Using linear interpolation, we estimated the proportion of time within the target calcium range for each patient with a median of 86% (interquartile range 67-98%). Of those with a 24-h urine collection for calcium (n = 53), 38% had at least one measurement over 300 mg/d. Of those with renal imaging (n = 54), 31% had renal calcifications, and 52% of those with head imaging (n = 31) had basal ganglia calcifications. Rates of chronic kidney disease stage 3 or higher were 2- to 17-fold greater than age-appropriate norms. Hypoparathyroidism and its treatment carry a large burden of disease. Renal abnormalities are particularly common.

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