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Endocrine Abstracts (2025) 109 P199 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.109.P199

SFEBES2025 Poster Presentations Neuroendocrinology and Pituitary (48 abstracts)

A rare case of FGF-23-mediated hypophosphataemia secondary to a neurodendocrine tumour

Raisa Minhas 1 , Elizabeth Hyams 2 , Sairah Khan 1 , Duncan Spalding 2 & Florian Wernig 2,1


1Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom; 2Imperial College, London, United Kingdom


A 49-year-old male with a history of hypertension, hypothyroidism, obstructive sleep apnoea, and prostatitis presented to the emergency department with a presyncopal episode and tachycardia (140 bpm). Notably, the patient’s mother had recently passed away from metastatic small bowel neuroendocrine tumour (NET). Laboratory findings revealed severe hypophosphataemia (phosphate: 0.36mmol/l, calcium: 2.41mmol/l, PTH: 8.7 pmol/l), initially managed with intravenous phosphate. Within a week of discharge, he was readmitted for recurrent hypophosphataemia and discharged on oral phosphate. His medical history included similar admissions with critically low phosphate levels (as low as 0.18mmol/l), previously attributed to diarrhoeal illness. At the endocrine clinic, further investigations showed persistently low phosphate, elevated 24-hour urinary phosphate (82mmol/day), and raised fibroblast growth factor (FGF-23) at 135 IU/ml (reference range: <100). He was prescribed alfacalcidol (0.75 mcg) and sando-phos (6 tablets daily) which stabilized his phosphate levels. Unexpectedly, gallium DOTATATE PET/CT (Ga-68 DOTATATE) imaging revealed a 15mm somatostatin receptor-expressing mesenteric nodal deposit, suggestive of a NET. No primary tumour was identified on somatostatin receptor (SSTR) imaging, contrast enhanced CT or capsule endoscopy. Following discussion at the NET MDT, the patient underwent a small bowel wedge resection and excision of mesenteric nodes, which identified a well-differentiated small bowel grade 1 NET (Ki67 <3%) staged as pT4N1R1. Postoperative phosphate levels stabilized at 0.89mmol/l, allowing him to discontinue alfacalcidol and phosphate supplementation.

Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of tumour-induced osteomalacia secondary to a small bowel NET. It highlights the need to consider tumour-induced osteomalacia in the differential diagnosis, the critical role of somatostatin receptor (SSTR) imaging, and multidisciplinary management in diagnosing and treating NETs with paraneoplastic manifestations.

Volume 109

Society for Endocrinology BES 2025

Harrogate, UK
10 Mar 2025 - 12 Mar 2025

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