Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, University Hospital Leuven, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium
Correspondence and offprint requests to: Dr P. Evenepoel, Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, University Hospital Gasthuisberg, Herestraat 49, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium. Email: Pieter.Evenepoel{at}uz.kuleuven.ac.be
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Abstract |
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Methods. Charts of 1647 kidney allograft recipients, transplanted between 1989 and 2004, were reviewed. Thirty-two patients with a functioning graft and a history of a successful PTX performed at least 9 months after transplantation were identified. Biochemical and clinical data available 6 months pre- and post-PTX were registered. Changes in BP, renal function and serum lipids were assessed. The data were compared with those obtained in a similar time frame in a control group closely matched for date of transplantation.
Results. Systolic BP (149.9 vs 141.7 mmHg), diastolic BP (85.6 vs 81.9 mmHg), pulse pressure (64.3 vs 58.8 mmHg), total cholesterol concentration (221.4 vs 211.1 mg/dl) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentration (123.9 vs 106.7 mg/dl) improved significantly after successful PTX. Serum creatinine, conversely, significantly increased after PTX (1.75 vs 2.13 mg/dl, P<0.0001). No significant changes were observed in the control group in the same time period.
Conclusion. In patients with a functioning renal graft, BP and dyslipidaemia improve, whereas serum creatinine worsens following successful PTX. Our data are in agreement with a stimulatory effect of PTH on plasma renin activity and an inhibitory effect on lipase activity, as previously demonstrated by others. To what extent the increased serum creatinine following PTX reflects a true deterioration of the glomerular filtration rate and/or is the consequence of vitamin D-induced reduction of the renal tubular secretion of creatinine needs to be elucidated by further research.
Keywords: hyperparathyroidism; kidney transplantation; parathyroidectomy
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Introduction |
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Elevated concentrations of PTH play a role not only in the pathogenesis of renal bone disease, but also in the development of cardiovascular risk factors such as disturbed lipid metabolism, glucose intolerance and hypertension. Abrogation of HPT by administration of a calcimimetic or parathyroidectomy (PTX) attenuates progression of renal failure in subtotally nephrectomized rats [3].
Successful kidney transplantation corrects the endocrine and metabolic imbalances and the main abnormalities responsible for secondary HPT in the first months [2]. Nevertheless these early favourable events are not always followed by a rapid normalization of PTH secretion. Elevated PTH levels are observed in up to 25% of patients 1 year after transplantation despite adequate renal function [4]. A subgroup of these patients ultimately will require PTX.
Data on the impact of PTX on renal function, blood pressure (BP) and serum lipid concentrations are limited or non-existent in humans, especially in patients with persistent HPT after successful renal transplantation. The aim of the present observational cohort study was to elucidate this topic.
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Subjects and methods |
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For each of the 32 PTX patients, a non-parathyroidectomized (non-PTX) renal transplant recipient matched for date of transplantation and a post-transplant follow-up exceeding the time interval between transplantation and PTX of the corresponding case was selected. The control group (group B) consisted of 17 men and 15 women with a mean age of 49.4±13.3 years. The reasons for renal failure were as follows: diabetes (n = 6), glomerulonephritis/vasculitis (n = 5), interstitial nephritis (n = 3), cystic/hereditary/congenital (n = 6) and unknown or missing (n = 12). Twenty-four patients received haemodialysis, while seven patients were on peritoneal dialysis at the time of transplantation (Table 1).
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The charts from both case and control patients were reviewed in detail. Information abstracted included drug regimen, clinical and laboratory data. Two study periods were arbitrarily defined: period 1 included the 6 months prior to PTX; period 2 comprised the 6 months after PTX. Controls were studied in the corresponding time span. The biochemical and clinical parameters extracted from the charts were averaged per study period.
Blood pressure
BP was measured on the arm without an arteriovenous fistula, with a mercury sphygmomanometer. Diastolic BP (DBP) was defined as the disappearance of the phase V Korotkoff sound; mean BP (MBP) was calculated as DBP + one-third of the difference between systolic BP (SBP) and DBP. Hypertension was defined as an SBP >160 mmHg and/or DBP >90 mmHg and/or the need for antihypertensive treatment.
Biochemistry
Total serum calcium, phosphorus, creatinine, total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, triglycerides and total alkaline phosphatases were measured using a computerized autoanalyser. Serum concentrations of iPTH were determined by an IRMA, as described elsewhere [5]. Creatinine clearance was calculated from a 24 h urine collection and according to the CockcroftGault equation. Compliance with the salt-restricted diet was evaluated by measuring the 24 h urinary salt excretion.
Statistics and calculations
Parameters with Gaussian distribution are expressed as mean±SD, whereas parameters with skewed distribution are expressed as median and interquartile range (IQR). Percentual changes were calculated as follows:
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Results |
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Blood pressure
In group A, there was a limited, though highly significant decrease of SBP, DBP and MBP after PTX (SBP 149.9±19.3 vs 141.7±13.5 mmHg; DBP 85.6±9.9 vs 81.9±7.2 mmHg; MBP 107.0±12.2 vs 101.8±8.4 mmHg; period 1 vs period 2, P<0.005 for all). The pulse pressure also improved significantly following PTX (64.3±13.7 vs 58.8±10.6 mmHg, P<0.01). Twenty-nine (91%) patients were on antihypertensive drugs before the PTX. In none of them could antihypertensive therapy be discontinued after PTX. The number of antihypertensive drugs per patient decreased from 2.2 to 2.0 (NS).
In group B, no significant changes in blood pressure were observed (SBP 141.3±17.7 vs 142.9±16.1; DBP 81.5±10.0 vs 83.6±10.0; MBP 101.4±10.8 vs 103.4± 10.3; period 1 vs period 2, P = NS). Twenty-four (75%) patients of the control group were on antihypertensive treatment. The number of antihypertensive drugs per patient amounted to 1.5 and 1.6 during period 1 and 2, respectively.
The overall compliance with the salt-restricted diet was good. No significant differences in 24 h urinary salt excretion between either study periods or groups were found.
BP, number of patients on antihypertensive therapy and mean number of antihypertensive drugs per patient were higher, although not significantly, in group A compared with group B.
Mineral metabolism
A significant decrease of the serum level of PTH, calcium and alkaline phosphatases (P<0.05, all) was observed after PTX. Serum phosphorus level, conversely, increased significantly (P<0.0001) (Table 2). The percentage of patients treated with calcium salts increased from 18.8 to 96.9 after PTX. The percentage of patients on active vitamin D treatment (calcitriol or 1--OHD3) increased from 9.4 to 84.4 after PTX (P<0.001) (Table 3). The mean daily dose of active vitamin D after PTX was 0.84±0.77 µg. In group B, no changes were observed in any of these parameters between the two study periods (Tables 2 and 3).
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In group B, significant changes were not observed in any of the lipid parameters between either study period. No significant differences were observed between group A and B (Tables 2 and 3).
Immunosuppression
Immunosuppressive therapy did not differ between groups and periods (Tables 1 and 3). Cyclosporin A and tacrolimus blood trough levels were not significantly different between either group and periods (Table 2).
Correlations
In group A, the change in BP was significantly related to pre-PTX blood pressure (r = 0.69, P<0.0001) and calcaemia (r = 0.43, P<0.05) (Figure 1), but not to pre-PTX renal function or serum iPTH level. The change in serum creatinine level correlated with none of the available clinical and biochemical parameters. BP, as opposed to renal function, was significantly correlated with cyclosporin A blood trough levels (r = 0.31, P<0.05).
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Discussion |
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During a 15 year period, 88 patients with a functioning graft requiring a PTX for severe and persistent hypercalcaemic HPT were identified. In order to obtain a homogenous and well-controlled study population and to maximize the reliability of the data, stringent selection criteria were formulated. Thirty-two patients fulfilled these inclusion and exclusion criteria. In these renal transplant recipients, the effect of the PTX on BP, lipid metabolism and renal function was analysed retrospectively.
One of the most striking findings was the significant deterioration of renal function following PTX. A >15% increase of the serum creatinine was observed in 65.6% of the patients. This finding is in agreement with data reported by others [9,10]. An improved renal function in renal transplant recipients who underwent subtotal PTX has also been described, especially in older studies [11]. These contradictory findings are most probably related to differences in patient characteristics such as the pre-PTX serum calcium level.
Whether the observed increase of serum creatinine reflects a true deterioration of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) remains to be established. There is evidence, although not unequivocal, that active vitamin D treatment, which was commenced in most of our patients at the time of the PTX, may reduce renal tubular secretion of creatinine, and thereby affect serum creatinine levels and measurement of creatinine clearance without altering the true GFR [12]. This interference is thought to be dose dependent and to be more pronounced in patients with severe kidney disease (stages 45). We did not observe a correlation between the deterioration of renal function and either baseline renal function or vitamin D dose after PTX. An almost identical increase of serum creatinine was observed in patients receiving vitamin D following PTX as in those that did not. Urea nitrogen did not increase following PTX. We do not think that this observation refutes our hypothesis. Indeed, urea nitrogen is widely accepted to be a poor index of GFR since both its generation and tubule reabsorption are highly variable. Nonetheless, only prospective studies including precise and reliable measurements of graft function (e.g. determination of inulin clearance) will allow definite conclusions concerning the separate impact of PTX and active vitamin D treatment on GFR.
The renal function deterioration occurred already during the first week following the PTX (data not shown). This time course suggests an underlying haemodynamic mechanism. PTH has vasodilatory effects on pre-glomerular vessels, while efferent arterioles are constricted, presumably secondary to renin release [13]. Reversal of these effects may cause an acute deterioration of renal function. In the long term, however, these haemodynamic changes may contribute to the attenuation of the progression of renal failure, as demonstrated by others in an animal model [3,14]. A preliminary analysis of data on the long-term time course of the graft function after PTX is consistent with this hypothesis: after an initial deterioration, renal function showed a slow but steady improvement over years towards baseline. Obviously, these data need to be confirmed by a well-controlled trial. Whether a PTX affects renal graft survival remains a controversial issue. Lee et al. studied graft survival in 22 PTX renal transplant recipients and demonstrated a detrimental effect of the surgical procedure [10]. Kerby et al. conversely, did not find a difference in long-term graft survival between patients requiring PTX (n = 38) and a matched group of renal allograft recipients [15]. Obviously, only a large (multicentre) observational matched cohort study will allow definite conclusions on this issue.
A second important finding of our study was the significant decrease of BP after PTX. Studies of the effect of PTX on BP have produced contradictory results. Experimentally, PTX induces a lowering of BP in spontaneously hypertensive rats [16]. In humans too, a fall in BP following PTX has been demonstrated [9]. However, these data have not been confirmed by others [17].
The BP-lowering effect of PTX is most probably related to the normalization of the serum calcium and/or PTH levels. The mechanisms through which changes in the concentrations of serum calcium and PTH affect BP are complex and only partially understood. Hypercalcaemia may induce hypertension through an increase in cardiac output or peripheral vascular resistance, or both, or through an increased release or action, or both, of pressor substances (e.g. catecholamines or renin) [18]. PTH has been demonstrated to play an important permissive role for the hypertensive action of hypercalcaemia [18]. In the presence of PTH, more calcium may enter the vascular smooth muscle, and such an event augments the hypertensive response to the rise in serum calcium. This action counteracts the direct vasodilatatory effects of PTH, and its full expression becomes evident only in the presence of hypercalcaemia [18]. Several lines of evidence indicate that the endothelium is a target of PTH with potential impact on BP. In patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, impaired flow-mediated vasodilatation in the brachial artery is improved by PTX. In renal transplant patients, endothelial dysfunction is correlated to PTH levels, and elevated PTH concentrations have a deleterious effect on elastic properties of the arterial wall [19]. Our finding of a decreased pulse pressure following PTX is in agreement with the latter finding. In some patients, finally, the decrease in BP observed following PTX could be related to the removal of a recently identified circulating factor termed parathyroid hypertensive factor. This factor is dialysable, heat stable and potentiates different vasoconstrictors [20].
We observed a significant positive correlation between the pre-PTX serum calcium level and the decrease of BP, supporting the hypothesis that calcium plays a central role in the genesis of hypertension in patients with HPT [21].
Finally, we also observed a modest amelioration of dyslipidaemia following PTX. A beneficial effect of PTX on cholesterol levels had been observed by Ogata et al. [3] and numerous other authors [14]. The effect of PTH is probably independent of the presence of renal failure, as suggested by the observation of reversible hyperlipoproteinaemia in patients with primary HPT [8]. A decreased activity of both the lipoprotein [6] and hepatic lipase [7] has been implicated in the pathogenesis of dyslipidaemia related to HPT. These changes in lipase metabolism were corrected by PTX [6,7] and calcium channel blockade [7]. The latter, again, supports a causative role for cytosolic calcium concentrations. The observation that administration of insulin corrected the disturbed metabolism of triglyceride-rich particles indicates that the effect of PTH at least partially involves inhibition of insulin secretion or interference with its peripheral action [22].
Changes in the reninangiotensin system and and/or cystosolic calcium concentrations are likely to play a causative role in the changes in renal function, BP and lipid metabolism following PTX. We therefore performed subgroup analyses to evaluate the effect of treatment with either a calcium channel blocker or an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor/angiotensin II receptor blocker on the outcome of a PTX. We failed to find a significant treatment effect, most probably as a result of low absolute numbers.
One could argue that the changes in blood renal function, BP and serum lipids are the consequence of non-specific effects of anaesthetic/surgery. Equally, better control of BP and serum lipids might reflect increased hospital attendance. This explanation is, however, unlikely since, in a study with a similar design including 48 renal transplant recipients with stable graft function at the time of inclusion, we did not observe significant differences in any of the above-mentioned parameters between the 6 month period before and after orthopaedic surgery (data not shown).
In conclusion, in patients with a functioning renal graft, BP and dyslipidaemia improve, whereas serum creatinine increases following successful PTX. Our data are in agreement with a stimulatory effect of PTH on plasma renin activity and an inhibitory effect on lipase activity, as previously demonstrated by others. To what extent the increased serum creatinine reflects a true deterioration of the GFR or is the consequence of active vitamin D-induced reduction of the renal tubular secretion of creatinine needs to be elucidated by further research.
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Acknowledgments |
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Conflict of interest statement. None declared.
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References |
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