Oncogenic osteomalacia: evidence for a humoral phosphaturic factor

GE Wilkins, S Granleese, RG Hegele… - The Journal of …, 1995 - academic.oup.com
GE Wilkins, S Granleese, RG Hegele, J Holden, DW Anderson, GP Bondy
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1995academic.oup.com
Oncogenic osteomalacia is a syndrome characterized by phosphaturia, hypophosphatemia,
reduced vitamin D levels, and osteomalacia. The cause is not known, but all patients have
had a tumor; usually of mesenchymal origin. Removal of the tumor reverses the metabolic
abnormalities. We report a patient with osteomalacia, severe hypophosphatemia, elevated
alkaline phosphatase, low 1, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, and phosphaturia. A tumor was
identified in the infratemporal fossa. The tumor was removed, and all of the biochemical …
Abstract
Oncogenic osteomalacia is a syndrome characterized by phosphaturia, hypophosphatemia, reduced vitamin D levels, and osteomalacia. The cause is not known, but all patients have had a tumor; usually of mesenchymal origin. Removal of the tumor reverses the metabolic abnormalities. We report a patient with osteomalacia, severe hypophosphatemia, elevated alkaline phosphatase, low 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, and phosphaturia. A tumor was identified in the infratemporal fossa. The tumor was removed, and all of the biochemical abnormalities resolved over the subsequent 8 months. The bone density returned to normal values. The tumor had the appearance of a paraganglioma and was used to establish a cell culture line called JH-55. Electron microscopy of the original tumor and the JH-55 cells demonstrated the presence of neurosecretory granules. A bioassay using opossum kidney cells was used to evaluate phosphate transport. Conditioned medium from the JH-55 cells inhibited phosphate reabsorption by the kidney tubular cells. Maximal inhibition required a 24-h incubation period and was not altered by the presence of an inhibitor of protein synthesis (10 micrograms/mL cycloheximide). Immunoassays revealed no detectable PTH-related peptide or intact PTH in the JH-55 medium. The cause of this paraneoplastic syndrome is not known, but all of the evidence is consistent with the action of a hormone that produces phosphaturia. This putative factor is distinct from other hormones that cause phosphaturia.
Oxford University Press