1000 mg of Calcium resulted in some problems no matter how much vitamin D

Incidence of Hypercalciuria and Hypercalcemia during a Vitamin D Trial in Postmenopausal Women

Endocr Rev, Vol. 33 (03_MeetingAbstracts): OR38-1

Copyright © 2012 by The Endocrine Society ENDO 2012: June 23-26, 2012, Houston, Texas

Vinod Yalamanchili, MBBS1 and John Gallagher, MD1

1 Bone Metabolism Unit, Creighton University Medical Center Omaha, NE

Background: Long-term use of vitamin D and calcium supplements is common in older women. But there is no long-term data on hypercalcemia and hypercalciuria on supplements. In the WHI study there was a significant increase in renal stones in women on 400 IU/d dose of vitamin D3 and 1000mg extra calcium after 7 years but no biochemical data. We collected serum and urine calcium data every 3 months during a one-year trial of different doses of vitamin D.

Methods: Participants in this study were 163 Caucasian postmenopausal women, ages 57-85 years, randomized to one of the several doses of vitamin D3 - 400, 800, 1600, 2400, 3200, 4000, 4800 IU/day or placebo.

Calcium intake was increased to 1200-1400mg/d using calcium citrate from a baseline average of 691 mg/d. The main inclusion criterion was vitamin insufficiency -serum 25OHD < 20ng/ml (Diasorin assay).

Exclusion criteria were illness or medications known to affect vitamin D metabolism.

Serum and urine calcium were measured at baseline and every 3 months for one year. Multiple regression including age, dose, calcium intake, weight, serum 25OHD was used to analyze serum and urine calcium results separately.

Definition of hypercalcemia was a value > normal range (8.9-10.3 mg/dl) and

hypercalciuria a 24h urine calcium > normal (300mg).

Any abnormal event was verified after one week and if high values continued then calcium supplements were reduced or vitamin D was stopped.

Results: Mean baseline serum 25OHD was 15.6 ng/ml and increased on the highest dose of vitamin D to 45 ng/ml. Mean baseline serum calcium was 9.47 mg/dl and increased to 9.52 mg/dl; mean 24-hr urine calcium was 142 mg and increased to 186 mg. Final 24h urine calcium increased with vitamin D dose.

There were 88 episodes of hypercalciuria and 25 episodes of hypercalcemia.

There was no significant association between episodes of hypercalcemia or hypercalciuria and vitamin D dose or serum 25OHD and no kidney stones.

Prolonged hypercalciuria led to discontinuation of calcium in 2 and vitamin D in 1 subject.

Conclusion: About 33 percent of subjects had an episode of hypercalciuria and 10 percent an episode of hypercalcemia on vitamin D and calcium.

These changes were not related to vitamin D dose.

If these changes occur frequently with long-term use it could explain the increase in kidney stones seen in the WHI study.

Limitation of calcium supplements and measurement of 24h urine calcium is advisable with long-term use of vitamin D and calcium.

Nothing to Disclose: VY, JG


Typically should limit Calcium to 500 mg/day

See also VitaminDWiki

image

Supplements which combine vitamin D and Calcium (as of Jan-2010) = green diamonds

RDA of Vitamin D and Calcium is safe = green square

image

Tags: Calcium