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Urinary excretion of parathyroid hormone‐related protein fragments in patients with humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy and hypercalcemic tumor‐bearing nude mice
Author(s) -
Imamura Hidehito,
Sato Kanji,
Shizume Kazuo,
Satoh Tomoko,
Kasono Keizo,
Ozawa Minoru,
Ohmura Eiji,
Tsushima Toshio,
Demura Hiroshi
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
journal of bone and mineral research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.882
H-Index - 241
eISSN - 1523-4681
pISSN - 0884-0431
DOI - 10.1002/jbmr.5650060113
Subject(s) - urine , primary hyperparathyroidism , radioimmunoassay , endocrinology , malignancy , medicine , parathyroid hormone related protein , excretion , urinary system , hyperparathyroidism , parathyroid hormone , calcium
To investigate whether parathyroid hormone‐related protein (PTHrP), a hypercalcemia‐inducing factor responsible for malignancy‐associated hypercalcemia (MAH), is excreted into urine of these patients, radioimmunoassay was established using antiserum specific for the C‐terminal region of PTHrP‐(127–141). Immunoreactive PTHrP (iPTHrP) was detected in the urine of all patients with MAH ( n = 6) in whom nephrogenous cyclic AMP excretion was elevated. However, iPTHrP was not detected in the urine of normal subjects ( n = 25) or hypercalcemic patients with primary hyperparathyroidism ( n = 8). In normocalcemic patients with malignant disorders iPTHrP was not detected in the urine in most cases (24 of 25 patients) but was detectable in 1 of 25 patients. iPTHrP was also detected in the urine of hypercalcemic nude mice transplanted with PTHrP‐producing tumors, but not in the urine of control and normocalcemic nude mice transplanted with PTHrP‐nonproducing tumor. Furthermore, size‐exclusion high‐performance liquid chromatography revealed that the molecular weight of iPTHrP is about 2000–6000 daltons in the urine of patients as well as tumor‐bearing nude mice. These data indicate that the fragments of the C‐terminal region of PTHrP are excreted into the urine of patients with MAH and in a few normocalcemic patients with malignancies, suggesting that the measurement of iPTHrP in the urine is potentially useful in the differential diagnosis of hypercalcemia, particularly in differentiating humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy and primary hyperparathyroidism.