Parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels detected by intact PTH assays are generally higher than those detected by the whole PTH assay because the latter does not detect non-(1-84) PTH fragments, mainly PTH (7-84). Rare exceptions to this rule have been reported in patients with severe primary or secondary hyperparathyroidism and parathyroid carcinoma. Overproduction of an N-form of PTH other than PTH (1-84) has been observed in the sera of these patients. We report five additional cases with the reversed whole PTH/intact PTH ratio associated with severe hyperparathyroidism in haemodialysis patients. Three patients demonstrated enlargement of a single hypervascular gland, whereas the other two had undergone surgical parathyroidectomy and later showed recurrent hyperparathyroidism due to progressive autograft hyperplasia. In the case of a single enlarged gland, the pathological pattern and heterogeneous expression of parathyroid adenomatosis 1/cyclin D1 suggested it to be a single nodule of uraemic hyperparathyroidism rather than sporadic primary adenoma. These cases suggested that the reversed whole PTH/intact PTH ratio could be an indicator of marked parathyroid enlargement. Further studies are required to elucidate the clinical significance of the reversed whole PTH/intact PTH ratio in haemodialysis patients. © The Author [2008]. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Komaba, H., Takeda, Y., Shin, J., Tanaka, R., Kakuta, T., Tominaga, Y., & Fukagawa, M. (2008). Reversed whole PTH/intact PTH ratio as an indicator of marked parathyroid enlargement: Five case studies and a literature review. NDT Plus, 1(SUPPL.3). https://doi.org/10.1093/ndtplus/sfn088
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