Treatment with intermittent calcitriol and calcium reduces bone loss after renal transplantation

calcitriol Adult Male Administration, Oral 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Calcitriol Bone Density Risk Factors post-transplant osteoporosis Humans Prospective Studies VDR polymorphism Polymorphism, Genetic Middle Aged Kidney Transplantation 3. Good health Calcium Channel Agonists Nephrology Osteoporosis Receptors, Calcitriol Calcium Drug Therapy, Combination Female
DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1755.2004.00432.x Publication Date: 2004-01-08T15:42:33Z
ABSTRACT
Bone loss occurs during the first 6 months after renal transplantation (RT), and corticosteroid therapy plays an important role. Although calcium plus vitamin D administration prevents corticosteroid-induced osteoporosis, its use in RT recipients is limited by the risk of hypercalcemia.This double-blind, randomized, and controlled prospective intervention trial examined the effect of intermittent calcitriol (0.5 microg/48 h) during the first 3 months after RT, plus oral calcium supplementation (0.5 g/day) during 1 year with calcium supplementation alone. The primary outcome measure was the change in bone mineral density (BMD) at 3 and 12 months after RT; we also explored whether the effect of calcitriol on BMD was different among vitamin D receptor (VDR) genotypes (BsmI). Forty-five recipients were randomized to calcitriol therapy (CT) and 41 were randomized to placebo (PL).Both groups had a similar degree of pre-existing hyperparathyroidism (197 +/- 229 vs. 191 +/- 183 pg/mL), but a more pronounced decrease of parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels after RT was observed in CT patients (at 3 months: 61.4 +/- 42.2 vs. 85.7 +/- 53.1 pg/mL, P= 0.02; at 12 months: 67.3 +/- 33.7 vs. 82.6 +/- 37 pg/mL; P= 0.08). CT patients preserved their BMD at the total hip significantly better than those on PL (3 months: 0.04 +/- 3.3 vs. -1.93 +/- 3.2%, P= 0.01; 12 months: 0.32 +/- 4.8 vs. -2.17 +/- 4.4%, P= 0.03); significant differences were noted at the intertrochanter, trochanter, and Ward's triangle. Differences did not reach significance at the femoral neck. Two CT patients (4.4%) and 4 PL patients (9.8%) developed a hypercalcemic episode during the first 3 months after RT. The effect of CT on BMD at 3 months was more prominent in recipients with the at-risk allele of the VDR gene (P= 0.03).Therapy with low-dose calcium supplements during 1 year, plus intermittent calcitriol for 3 months after RT, is safe, decreases PTH levels more rapidly, and prevents bone loss at the proximal femur; a more pronounced effect is seen in recipients with at least one at-risk allele of the VDR genotype.
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