Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2013) 31 P33 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.31.P33

SFEBES2013 Poster Presentations Bone (34 abstracts)

Osteogenic malignancy and severe vitamin D deficiency (osteogenic osteomalacia)

Carol Postlethwaite , Amy Thomas , Peter Goulden & Jesse Kumar


Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust, Kent, UK.


Introduction: Vitamin D deficiency is increasingly being recognized as a metabolic disorder in temperate climates with various bone, cardiovascular and systemic manifestations. However topical, it is important to exclude tumour induced osteogenic osteomalacia as a possible aetiology in severe vitamin D deficiency when other risk factors (vegetarian diet, ethnicity, etc.) are absent. Early diagnosis of malignant tumors could be life saving and their resection may make this vitamin D resistant syndrome respond to treatment. We would like to introduce and discuss the importance of fibroblast growth factor-23 (FGF-23) as a tumor marker and a possible paraneoplastic substance.

Case report: A 58-year-old Caucasian man presented to his general practitioner with severe back pain and very low vitamin D3 levels (<10 nmol/l). Alkaline phosphatase was elevated at 160 U/l but calcium, phosphate and parathormone levels were normal. Over the next few months his calcium levels decreased further to a low of 2.06 mmol/l and phosphate to 0.76 mmol/l. He was prescribed vitamin D supplements and subsequently a Tc-99m bone scan revealed marked increased activity in the right proximal femur indicating an aggressive osteoblastic process, in-keeping with osteosarcoma. The femur was resected and a titanium implant inserted.

Discussion: Osteogenic osteomalacia is a very rare diagnosis with subtle manifestations which are considered a consequence of an underlying neoplasm, which can be very indolent. Undetected, the associated malignant tumors could metastasize. A high degree of clinical awareness and suspicion is required, particularly if the tumor is small along with the use of radiological investigations such as PET and Octreotide scans to detect occult tumours. FGF-23 is a member of the FGF family which is involved in phosphate homeostasis and skeletogenesis and may prove useful as a tumour marker to help exclude a malignant tumour in severe vitamin D deficiency.

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