Background. Maintenance haemodialysis patients often suffer from secondary hyperparathyroidism and serum parathyroid hormone levels may be influenced by nutritional variables. Methods. We examined serum bio-intact parathyroid hormone (BiPTH) and plasma vitamin C in 117 chronic haemodialysis patients. Plasma vitamin C was measured by high-performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection, on samples collected before start of the dialysis treatment. Results. Plasma vitamin C showed a significant positively skewed distribution, ranging from <2 μM to >300 μM. We found 15% (n = 17) of the patients with severe vitamin C deficiency (<10 μM), 66% (n = 77) in the range 10-80 μM, and 19% (n = 23) with plasma vitamin C >80 μM, the upper limit of normal for non-renal disease population. High plasma vitamin C was associated with lower plasma BiPTH (P = 0.005, one-way analysis of variance), and this association persisted after stepwise multiple regression for other factors known to influence PTH. Low vitamin C levels were also associated with increased serum alkaline phosphatase, a further indicator of the impact of vitamin C status on bone metabolism. Patients who reported dietary vitamin C intake of ≥100 mg/day had lower BiPTH (P = 0.015), consistent with findings from plasma measurements of vitamin C. This novel observation of the interaction between PTH and vitamin C may result from effects of vitamin C on cAMP-linked signalling pathways in bone and parathyroid gland. Conclusions. This finding does not yet warrant therapeutic intervention with supplemental vitamin C to remedy secondary hyperparathyroidism. However, further research may indicate a key interaction between vitamin C and the parathyroid hormone linked signalling pathways, and may uncover mechanisms of therapeutic importance. © The Author [2008]. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Richter, A., Kuhlmann, M. K., Seibert, E., Kotanko, P., Levin, N. W., & Handelman, G. J. (2008). Vitamin C deficiency and secondary hyperparathyroidism in chronic haemodialysis patients. Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, 23(6), 2058–2063. https://doi.org/10.1093/ndt/gfn084
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