University of Padua

CASR gene polymorphisms in primary hyperparathyroidism: genetic susceptibility and clinical variability

Voltan, Giacomo and Ceccato, Filippo (2025) CASR gene polymorphisms in primary hyperparathyroidism: genetic susceptibility and clinical variability. [Data Collection]

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Purpose: This study investigates the role of CASR gene polymorphisms (A986S, R990G, Q1011E) in PHPT genetic susceptibility and its clinical variability. The aim is to evaluate the prevalence of these polymorphisms in patients with sporadic PHPT and their impact on clinical course, biochemistry, and histological features. Methods: 106 patients underwent clinical and anamnestic evaluations, focusing on major PHPT complications, as well as biochemical analyses of blood and urine. Genetic testing was conducted for CASR gene polymorphisms. Histological data were available for 68 patients who underwent parathyroidectomy. Results: The sample included 83 women and 23 men; mean age at diagnosis was 54.5 years. 55 patients carried CASR gene polymorphisms, while 51 were wild-type. Prevalence rates of polymorphisms were consistent with data for the Caucasian population, with A986S being the most common (31%). No significant associations were found between polymorphisms and increased levels of ionized calcium or other blood phospho-calcium metabolism parameters. However, 24-hour urinary calcium levels were higher in patients with polymorphisms (p=0.0185), particularly in those older than 50 years (p=0.030) and with the A986S variant. Hypercalciuria was predictive of CASR polymorphism presence (OR = 2.76, p = 0.003). No significant association with PHPT complications, such as renal calculi or bone involvement, was confirmed. Histological data revealed no clear links between polymorphisms and more aggressive variants. Conclusion: CASR gene polymorphisms are associated with hypercalciuria but do not significantly influence age of onset or clinical phenotype in PHPT. Genetic analysis may be useful in selected cases to better understand individual clinical profiles.

DOI: 10.25430/researchdata.cab.unipd.it.00001566
Keywords: primary hyperparathyroidism; calcium sensing receptor
Subjects: Life Sciences > Physiology, Pathophysiology and Endocrinology: Organ physiology, pathophysiology, endocrinology, metabolism, ageing, tumorigenesis, cardiovascular diseases, metabolic syndromes > Fundamental mechanisms underlying cancer
Department: Departments > Dipartimento di Medicina (DIMED)
Depositing User: Filippo Ceccato
Date Deposited: 15 May 2025 07:45
Last Modified: 15 May 2025 07:45
Creators/Authors:
CreatorsEmailORCID
Voltan, Giacomogiacomo.voltan@aopd.veneto.itorcid.org/0000-0002-3628-0492
Ceccato, Filippofilippo.ceccato@unipd.itorcid.org/0000-0003-1456-8716
Type of data: Database
Collection period:
FromTo
20002022
Resource language: italian
Metadata language: italian
Publisher: Research Data Unipd
Date: 14 May 2025
Copyright holders: The Author
URI: https://researchdata.cab.unipd.it/id/eprint/1566

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