Effect of dihydrotachysterol on calcium absorption in uremia

Effect of dihydrotachysterol on calcium absorption in uremia

Effect of Dihydrotachysterol on Calcium Absorption in Uremia By Michael Kaye and S. Sagar The effect of dihydrotachysterol on gastrointestinal absor...

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Effect of Dihydrotachysterol on Calcium Absorption in Uremia By Michael

Kaye and S. Sagar

The effect of dihydrotachysterol on gastrointestinal absorption of calcium was studied in five undialyzed and five dialyzed patients with chronic uremia. Fecal calcium decreased and calcium

balance of the changes dialyzed

became less negative in nine ten patients; however, the were more marked in the patients.

A

S PREVIOUSLY SHOWN, dihydrotachysterolz (DHT), a compound very similar to vitamin DZ or calciferol chemically, has nonetheless different was noted the favorable rebiologic properties. I>2 Among these differences sponse of long-term dialysis patients with active secondary hyperparathyroidism due to chronic renal failure treated with this agent, whereas a similar dose of calciferol appeared ineffective. In the present study the external calcium balance was assessed in patients with chronic renal failure before and after administration of dihydrotachysterol. Those being treated by dialysis showed a considerably greater decrease in fecal calcium and a more positive calcium balance after DHT than the nondialyzed patients. MATERIALS

AND METHODS

Two groups of patients were studied. In those with residual renal function, Group I, there were five patients, and a total of seven studies were carried out. In Group II there were five patients stabilized on a chronic dialysis program. A single study was conducted on each patient. Collections of stool and urine were carried out in a metabolic unit supervised by a research dietitian and technician. Each patient received a diet as identical in calcium content and general nature as possible to that which the patient was consuming before admission. Two diets were employed and given on alternate days. These were prepared before the start of the study and a day’s diet of each was analyzed. Any medications being taken by the patients such as supplemental calcium or phosphate binders, are indicated in Table 1. These were continued in the same dosage as were the hemodialysis schedules. Kiil dialyzers were used with a dialyzate calcium of 6 mg/loo ml and no phosphate. None of the patients had received pharmacologic doses of vitamin D, but the patients on dialysis took a multivitamin tablet containing 400 units of Dz. In the three cases where DHT had previously been used, 5, 6, and 2 mo had elapsed, since it was discontinued until the beginning of the study. Chromic oxide was used as a fecal marker, 0.25 g 3 times daily with meals; all‘calculations for daily fecal excretion were based on this. Stool and urine were collected in individual pools and the duration of each pool and results obtained before and after DHT administration are shown in Tables 2-6. The equilibration period and the

From the Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, the Montrenl General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Received for publication November 29, 1971. Supported by USPHS Grant I”843-66-542 and Medical Research Council Grant MA-3224 for the Metabolic Unit. Michael Kaye, M.B., F.R.C.P. (C): Director, Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, the Montreal General Hospital; and Associate Professor, Department of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. S. Sagar, M.B., B.S.: Clinical Fellow in Nephrology, Department of Medicine, the Montreal General Hospital, Montrenl, Quebec, Canada, 7uly 7969-Tune 1971. Metabolism,

Vol. 21, No. 9 (September),

1972

815

I I I I

I II

II II II

II

MUL I MUL II CAN McM BAR I BAR II ROY GEN

DIS NAN PIT

LAW

34

49 35 53

65 66 76 72 46 46 59 26

Age

l

As calcium gluconogalactogfuconate t As calcium carbonate. * AS calcium gluconate.

I

I

Group

__

Name

_~_

(Sandor).

Chronic glomerulonephritis

Chronic glomerulonephritis Chronic glomerulonephritis Nephrosclerosis

Chronic pyelonephritis Chronic pyelonephritis Chronic pyelonephritis Polycystic disease Nephrosclerosis Nephrosclerosis Chronic glomerulonephritis Heretitary nephritis

Diagnosis

4.3

7.2 5.6 4.1

71.4 9.7 9.6 9.6

5.0 6.9 6.2 4.6 6.6 7.6 6.1 5.4

P mg/lOo ml

7.5 6.1 10.2 9.0 9.2 6.3 7.6 9.3

Ca mg/lOO ml

Serum

Table 1. Clinical Data on Patients

0.3

0.9 0 1.5

30

30 36 28

30

Clearance ml/min

4.1 3.4 2.7 22.4 7.2 6.1 2.6 0.9

Hours Dialysis, Weekly

Creatinine

176* mg Ca/day orally 660’ mg Ca/day orally Aluminum hydroxide 2 tabs/day 680’ mg Ca/day orally

1.Ot g Ca/day orally -

660’ mg Ca/day orally -

Medication

I

I

Mean

Mean

Mean

Mean

Mean

‘Percent

ROY

Mean BARII

BAR

McM

CAN

Mean MULII

MUL

Name

1 2

1 2

1 2

1 2

1 2

1319

530 1316 1322

435 1035 1098 1067 639 639 639 525 534

1028 1028 1028 379 377 378 378 435 434

1 2

1 2 3

take mwday

Pariod

dose absorbed.

6 8

7 6

6 7

7 6

7

7 7

No. Days

In-

Ca

1293

703 1217 1369

528 895 951 923 657 617 637 705 700

1000 1035 1018 564 595 612 590 538 518

Ca Stool mwday

Control

18

41 23 13

86 31 34 32 33 57 45 41 41

19 28 24 16 30 24 23 70 101

Ca Urine mwday

9

+8

+ -

76 60

-214

-179 +109 +113 +112 - 51 - 35 - 43 -221 -207

+

- 35 - 14 -201 -248 -258 -235 -173 -185

Balante mglday

65

45 61 69

68 52 34 43 58 53 56 47 43

38 29 34 59 63 43 55 56 79

Ca47*

4 3 5

7 7 7

7 7

7 7

4 7 4

7 6

7 7

NO. Days

4 5 6

4 5 6

4 5

4 5

4 5 6

5 6

4 5

Period

0.25 0.25 0.25

0.5 0.5 0.5

0.25 0.25

0.25 0.25

0.25 0.25 0.25

0.25 0.25

0.25 0.25

DHT mg/day

1323

351 1333 1322 1314

435 1011 1043 1027 639 639 639 525 204 325

379 435 434 435

1028 1028 1028 379 378

Ca Intake mwday

Table 2. Calcium Balance--Group

I

1184

574 1165 1170 1216

373 898 793 846 658 672 665 686 577 458

532 429 353 337

972 1007 990 519 545

Ca stool mwday

24

45 27 21 24

86 25 28 27 57 14 36 50 41 45

25 88 86 86

19 13 16 22 28

Ca Urine w/day

24

12

+115

70

73 +

74

51 67 -

97 42 37 40 25 32 29 40 47 68

54 94 100 -

50 51 51 50 57

Ca4”

-268 $141 +131

-t-68 j-222 j-154 - 76 - 47 - 62 -211 -414 -178

-

+

-178 - 80 -5

+ 37 +6 + 19 -162 -195

Balante mwday

DHT

57

33

54

19

42

+107

-

-

+

-j-l55

+

+

ABalante mgfday

$5

-l-6

-27

-3

+29

-1

+17

A Ca47’

LAW

PIT

NAN

DIS

GEN

7 7 7

7 7

7 7

7 7

10 7

1 2 3

1 2

1 2

1 2

1 2

Period

426 426 426 490 470 480 1095 1101 1098 876 879 878 1200 1200 1199 1200

lPercentdoseabsorbed.

Mean

Mean

Mean

Mean

Mean

Name

No. Days

Ca Intake mglday

481 510 475 493 1010 890 950 542 508 525 1332 1338 1127 1266

474 487

Ca stool mg/day

Control

3 2

3 2 3 1 3

-

17 17 17 26 17 22

w/day

Ca Urine

+ -

69 68

+148 +331 +369 +350 -133 -141

+ 85 +211

- 65 - 78 - 72 -46 - 22 - 35

w/day

Balante

65 46 56 62 39 50 46 55 50 46 52 49 12 63 62 46

Ca47’

7 6

7 8

7 7

7 12

10 10

No. Days

5 6

4 5

4 5

4 5

4 5

Period

0.25 0.25

0.25 0.25

0.375 0.375

0.25 0.25

0.25 0.25

DHT mgldw

Table 3.Calcium Balance-Group

1170

426 426 426 486 451 469 1095 1101 1098 879 878 879 1200 1140

Ca Intake mg/day

II

1041

896 879 888 481 464 473 1069 1013

434 371 403 323 121 222

Ca Stool mgfday

6

2 3 3 7 4

16 22 19 13 11 12

Ca Urine mg/day

+123

- 24 + 33 + 4 +150 +319 +235 4199 +222 +210 f396 +411 +403 +124 +I23

Balante mg/day

DHT

55

81 82 82 88 89 89 83 76 80 47 46 47 65 44

Ca47’

76

53

62

+191

+

+

+270

+

ABalante mglday

A

-kg

-2

+30

+39

+26

Ca47’

9 W

I

I

Mean

Mean

Mean

Mean

Mean

7 6

7 7

6 6

7 6

6 7

7 7 6

1 2

2

1

1 2

1 2

1 2

1 2 3

1 2

7 7

411

367

662 375 359

291 469 473 471 259 218 239 720 603

745 1074 1074 1074 690 690 690 659 869

664 402 419

298 314 306 361 354 365 360 292 290

-

P Stool mglday

160

487 170 150

401 529 575 552 517 532 525 474 499

180 260 230 257 342 315 305 440 361

P Urine mglday

Control

622 610 616 587 577 582 582 745 744

'Per cent dose absorbed.

ROY

Mean BAR II

BAR

McM

CANI

Mean MULII

MUL

Name

Period

No. Days

P Intake mg/day

13 93

-116

-285 -143 - 90

+ 53 + 76 + 26 + 51 - 86 - 60 - 74 -335 -233

+ +

+ 16 + 60 - 31 -119 - 98 - 83

+144

Balante mglday

65

45 61 69

68 52 34 43 58 53 56 47 43

38 29 34 59 63 43 55 56 79

Ca47’

4 3 5

7 7 7

7 7

7 7

4 7 4

7 6

7 7

No. Days

4 5 6

4 5 6

4 5

4 5

4 5 6

5 6

4 5

Period

Table4.Phosphorus

0.25 0.25 0.25

0.5 0.5 0.5

0.25 0.25

0.25 0.25

0.25 0.25 0.25

0.25 0.25

0.25 0.25

DHT mg/day

585 745 744 745 745 1080 1060 1080 691 689 690 859 401 517 592 447 419 398 421

622 610 616 587 582

P Intake mg/day

Balance-Group i

347 248 255 337 260 428 369 399 207 169 198 584 518 471 524 393 391 366 383

516 510 513 354 339

P Stool mg/day

352 362 560 560 501 524 592 556 589 661 615 535 490 450 492 120 110 130 120

220 355 288 309 395

P Urine mgjday

-114 +115 - 71 -152 - 36 +128 +119 +123 - 85 -161 -123 -260 -807 -404 424 - 66 -62 - 98 - 82

-114 -255 -185 - 76 -152

Balante mgjday

DHT

54 94 100 97 42 37 40 25 32 29 40 47 66 51 67 73 70

50 51 51 50 57

Ca47’

31

49

72

+

34

-139

-

+

-104

-

-265

AEialante mglday

A

i-5

i-6

-27

-3

f29

-1

f17

Ca47’

Mean

Mean

Mean

Mean

Mean

7 7 7

7 7

7 7

7 7

10 7

1 2 3

1 2

1 2

1 2

1 2

Period

667 693 690 565 534 550 771 759 765 654 640 a47 ii08 1112 1106 1109

511 324 418 278 236 257 1651 1286 1469 584 620 602 406 392 372 390

mglday

P

Stool

take

mglday

lPercentdoseabsorbed.

LAW

PIT

NAN

DIS

GEN

Name

No. Days

Control

P In-

55 47 51 2 14 30 15

29 28 29 45 31 38 -

P Urine mgfday

1-243 $242 +267 $255 -680 -527 -704 +215 +173 +194 +700 +706 4706 +704

f147 +341

Balante mgldaY

65 46 56 62 39 50 45 55 50 46 52 49 12 63 62 46

Ca47*

7 6

7 a

7 7

7 12

10 10

No. Days

II

354

0.25 0.25

0.25 0.25

771 759 765 a40 a48 a44 1108 1020 1064

5 6

4 5

4 5

0.375 0.375

563 464 514

0.25 0.25

4 5

276 254 265 212 155 la4 1241 1491 1366 605 594 600 320 388 687 687 687

0.25 0.25

4 5

P Stool mgldey

DHT mg/daY

Period

P Intake mg/day

Table 5. Phosphorus Balance-Group

26

27 45 36 26 21 23 33 18 26 38 14

P Urine

$684

+364 +3aa +386 +325 +2a6 $307 470 -732 -601 +202 +236 +216 +750 +618

Balante mg/day

DHT

55

al a2 62 aa a9 a9 a3 76 80 47 46 47 65 44

Ca47*

52

-

+

20

24

f103

+

+143

%VW

ABalante

*A

+9

-2

+30

$39

$26

Ca47’

x

15

16 16

792 752

712

771 816 794

l

627 506

365

613 743 776

33 207

380

36 11 25

Urine w/day

or per cent

Stool w/day

balance

Intake w/day

Per cent dose absorbed. TA is the net change in either

Group

I

15 16 16

Group II Groups I and II

Group I Group II Groups I and II Phosphorus

Calcium

NO. Days

Control

53

60 62 9

radioactive

+I32 $ 39

-

+ -

Balante w/day

Table 6. Mean Values

calcium

50 51

52

52 50 51

Ca47’

775 726

676

740 608 774

Intake m/day

554 466

376

736 605 672

stool w/day

and Phosphorus

absorption.

16 16

15

15 16 16

No. Days

for Calcium

28 223

416

37 10 24

Urine w/day

Balance

35 +193 + 78

Balance w/day

j-193 + 37

-120

DHT

71 64

56

56 71 64

Ca47’

-I- 61 2

-67

-t-45 +131 + 67

ABalance w/day

$21 fl3

$4

i-4 +21 $13

Ca47’

A

5

z

it

C

2

E

E

F i;

822

KAYE AND SAGAR

first pool after DHT administration

of 4-5 days duration have been excluded. Radioactive calcium absorption was measured by giving orally 10 /Ki 47Ca at 8:00 a.m. after overnight fasting. The solution did not contain carrier calcium but two so-ml washes with tap water containing 4 mg/IOO ml calcium were taken to rinse the container. Stools were collected as part of the balance for the following 7 days, and homogenized and weighed aliquots were counted in duplicate together with a suitably diluted standard of the administered 47Ca. The 47Sc counts were excluded by appropriate window settings. Clinical data on the subjects are shown in Table I. Analytical methods were similar to those described previ0usly.334The DHT used was kindly supplied by Dr. C. W. Birkett of Winthrop Laboratories as Hytakerol. This has been shown to be chemically and biologically similar to pure crystalline DHT.2 Several months after completing the balance study and stopping DHT, all subjects in Group II, three other long-term dialysis patients, and one patient with chronic uremia awaiting transplantation were given 47Ca intravenously. The excretion of the isotope in the stool was determined over the following 5 days.

RESULTS

Control

Period

The findings are shown in Tables 2 and 3 for calcium and Tables 4 and s for phosphorus, and summarized in Table 6. The mean calcium intake was similar in the two groups, being 771 mg/day for Group I and 816 mg/day for Group II. Urine calcium was slightly higher in those not yet being dialyzed as would be expected. In Group II, the calcium balance was slightly positive and slightly negative in Group I, +62 mg/day as compared with -80 mg/day. The difference could be mainly accounted for by the smaller fecal calcium in Group II. Radioactive calcium absorption was comparable and low in both groups. If the two groups were pooled and divided into those with calcium intakes above and below 800 mg/day, the balance was $-89 mg/day where the intake was in excess of 800 mg daily and -129 mg/day when it was below. Phosphorus intake in the two groups was similar in the control period. The mean balance was -53 mglday for Group I and +I32 mglday for Group II. The difference is due to the negligible urinary phosphorus loss in this group. As the losses by hemodialysis have not been allowed for, overall balance would be actually much less positive for Group II. DHT Period Calcium intake was similar to the control period; however, balance was now positive in all the Group II patients and negative in three of the Group I patients. When the change in calcium balance was calculated, ACa in Table 2, all balances became more positive with the exception of the two studies done on BAR. This change in balance was due to a mean decrease in fecal calcium of 138 mg/day in Group II and 75 mg/dav in Group I. The improvement in calcium balance after DHT in the nondialyzed patients is small and variable from patient to patient. This contrasts with the uniform and in some instances quite striking positive balance seen in the Group II dialvzed patients. If the two groups are pooled, the overall change in calcium balance was significant using the Wilcoxon rank test, p
unchanged

in Group

in Group II and was I. The pooled change was almost zero. The change in

CALCIUM

ABSORPTION

823

IN UREMIA

phosphorus balance in Group II was less than the change in calcium balance and the molar ratio nCa/nP was 1.66, which is similar to the Call’ ratio of hydroxyapatite. The 47Ca absorption followed the change in stable calcium absorption and comparison of n*sCa and A4’Ca gave a correlation coefficient r = 0.6547, p <0.05. *‘Ca intravenously The nine subjects excreted 7.8 F 1.2 per cent of the administered dose, range 4.7%-16.4%, in the stool over the subsequent 5 days. This is similar to our previous values of 7.2% for normal subjects and 8.1% for patients with uremia with a calculated endogenous fecal calcium of 2.3 and 2.6 mg/ kg/day for control patients and patients with uremia, respectively.5 DISCUSSION

It should be noted that the balance data reported for the dialyzed patients do not represent the total gains or losses because no account has been taken of the changes occuring during hemodialysis. However, with a dialyzate calcium of 6 mg/loo ml the net transfer of calcium across the dialyzer membrane is minimal if the plasma calcium is in the normal range.s As we were mainly interested in intestinal absorption, it was felt to be permissible to ignore the changes during dialysis. In the case of phosphorus as the dialyzate is phosphate free and losses of 0.5-1.0 g of phosphorus are usual with each dialysis, the addition of these losses to those in stool and urine will effectively cancel the positive phosphorus balances shown in Table 2. Nevertheless they still permit deductions to be drawn from the changes in fecal data presented. The decrease in fecal calcium during DHT could have been due either to augmented absorption or to a decrease in endogenous secreted calcium or a combination of both. We have previously reported endogenous calcium to be normal in patients with chronic uremia, * but this has recently been questioned.6 Because of possible differences in patient populations this was reexamined and found to be unchanged, supporting the view that the decrease in fecal calcium with DHT is due to a true increase in absorption. The balance data support our previous observations that calcium absorption is impaired in chronic renal failure but that with a calcium intake of 0.8 g or more daily, balance is usually close to equilibrium.4*7 The failure to adapt to a low calcium intake is presumably due to the abnormalities in vitamin D metabolism leading to a deficiency of calcium-binding protein in the intestinal cells.8 That this block can be overcome or at least minimized by increasing the luminal calcium concentration suggests that absorption of calcium at high levels of intake may be partially independent of the vitamin D-sensitive transport process. The improvement in calcium balance produced by DHT provides an explanation for the healing of renal osteodystrophy observed previouslv in dialysis patients treated with this agent. Equivalent doses of calciferol had no effect on *‘Ca absorption and would not be expected to augment stable calcium absorption to the extent seen with DHT.3 It has been suggested in view of the identification of 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol as the hormone acting on the

824

KAYE AND SAGAR

intestine, that hydroxylation at carbon 1 will be impaired in the presence of severe renal failure as this process occurs uniquely in the kidney.g DHT is, however, alreadv hydroxylated at the steric equivalent of Cl and onlv requires preliminary hydroxylation at c25 by the liver. This may explain the difference in potency between DHT and calciferol in augmenting calcium absorption in patients with chronic uremia. It was apparent that calcium absorption was better both before and after DHT in the dialyzed Group II patients than those with more residual renal function. This would seem difficult to reconcile with the requirement of having some functioning renal tissue for hydroxylation of 25-hvdroxycholecalciferol as the reverse findings would have been expected. The data lead one to SUSpect that some additional process not directly vitamin D-dependent may be affected bv “uremia” itself. This could be a nonspecific depression of general protein svnthesis, which is alleviated by dialysis but leaves unchanged the specific block in vitamin D metabolism. Doses of DHT between 0.25 and 0.375 mg should be adequate for correction of the defect in calcium absorption in dialyzed patients with uremia. It is apnarent from the balance data that this dosage will be inadequate for most nondialvzed patients with chronic uremia. ACKNOWLEDGMENT Miss S. McDonagh, research dietitian, supervised all studies. Miss M. Hellstrom, Mrs. J. Henderson, and Miss M. White gave valuable technical assistance, and Miss A. Thompson. R.N., helped with the dialysis patients. Finally, we wish to thank the patients who voJunteered for the study and Miss D. Thornber for secretarial assistance.

REFERENCES 1. Harrison, H. E., Lifshitz, F., and Blizzard, R. M.: Comparison between crystalline dihydrotachysterol and calciferol in patients requiring pharmacologic vitamin D therapy. New Eng. J. Med. 276 :894, 1967. 2. Kaye, M., Just, G., and Wilson, M.: Comparison of dihydrotachysterol, hytakerol and calciferol. Canad. J. l’hysiol. Pharmacol. 49 :857,1971. 3. Kaye, M., Chatterjee, G., Cohen, G. F., and Sagar, S.: Arrest of hyperparathyroid bone disease with dihydrotachysterol in pachronic hemodialysis. tients undergoing Ann. Intern. Med. 73:225, 1970. 4. Kaye, M., and Silverman, M.: Calcium metabolism in chronic renal failure. J. Lab. Clin. Med. 66:535, 1965. 5. Kaye, M., Mangel, R., and Neubauer, E.: Studies in calcium metabolism in patients on chronic hemodialysis. In Proceedings, Third Conference of the European

Dialysis and Transplant Association, 1961, p. 17. 6. Reiner, M., Nadarazah, A., Woolhouse, N. J. Y., Nunziata, V., Sevitt, L., and Joplin, G. F.: Calcium absorption and excretion in the gut in chronic renal failure. Israel J. Med. Sci. 7:522, 1971. 7. Kaye, M., Pritchard, J. E., Halpenny, G. W., and Light, W.: Bone disease in chronic renal failure with particular reference to osteosclerosis. Medicine 39:X7, 1960. 8. Avioli, L. V., Scott, S., Lee, S. W., and DeLuca, H. F.: Intestinal calcium absorption: Nature of defect in chronic renal disease. Science 166 :1154, 1969. 9. Fraser, D. R., and Kodicek, E.: Unique biosynthesis by kidney of a biologically active vitamin D metabolite. Nature (London) 228 ~764, 1970.