Measuring Total Blood Calcium Displays a Low Sensitivity for the Diagnosis of Hypercalcemia in Incident Renal Transplant Recipients

作者:Evenepoel Pieter*; Bammens Bert; Claes Kathleen; Kuypers Dirk; Meijers Bjoern K I; Vanrenterghem Yves
来源:Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 2010, 5(11): 2085-2092.
DOI:10.2215/CJN.02460310

摘要

Background and objectives: Hypercalcemia is a common complication in renal transplant recipients and has been associated with nephrocalcinosis and poor graft outcome. The performance of total calcium (tCa) in the diagnosis of blood calcium disturbances in renal transplant recipients is unknown.
Design, setting, participants, & measurements: We compared the ability of total tCa concentration to identify low, normal, or high ionized calcium (iCa) concentration, i.e., the gold standard, in an unselected cohort of 268 renal transplant recipients. All patients were studied 3 and 12 months after successful engraftment.
Results: Hypercalcemia, defined as a iCa >1.29 mmol/L, was present in 58.6 and 44.8% of the patients at months 3 and 12, respectively. tCa concentrations >10.3 mg/dl, conversely, were observed in only 13.1% of the patients. Measuring tCa had a low sensitivity (20.3 and 24.2% at months 3 and 12, respectively) for the diagnosis of hypercalcemia. The agreement (kappa coefficient [95% confidence interval]) between tCa concentrations and iCa was poor (month 3: 0.11 [0.05 to 0.17]; month 12: 0.20 [0.11 to 0.30]). The risk for underestimating iCa was increased by a low total bicarbonate concentration. Metabolic acidosis was observed in 48.1 and 37.3% of the patients at months 3 and 12, respectively.
Conclusions: Total calcium greatly underestimates the diagnosis of hypercalcemia in incident renal transplant recipients. This is mainly explained by the high prevalence of metabolic acidosis in these patients. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol 5: 2085-2092, 2010. doi: 10.2215/CJN.02460310

  • 出版日期2010-11