# Exploring the relationship between calcitonin, ionized calcium, and bone turnover in cats with and without naturally occurring hypercalcemia

**Authors:** Evangelia Maniaki, Carmen Pineda, Angie Hibbert, Natalie Finch

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2024.1399942 · Frontiers in Veterinary Science · 2024-06-03

## TL;DR

This study examined how calcitonin, calcium levels, and bone turnover relate in cats with and without high blood calcium, finding that only a few cats showed expected calcitonin responses.

## Contribution

The study reveals limited calcitonin response in hypercalcemic cats and a novel inverse relationship between calcitonin and bone turnover markers.

## Key findings

- Only 19.2% of hypercalcemic cats showed increased calcitonin levels.
- No significant correlation was found between calcitonin and ionized calcium in hypercalcemic cats.
- An inverse relationship between calcitonin and bone turnover was observed in cats with elevated calcitonin.

## Abstract

This case-control study aimed to evaluate calcitonin response in naturally occurring hypercalcemia in cats and assess the relationships between calcitonin and ionized calcium (iCa) and examine relationships between calcitonin, iCa and bone turnover.

Hypercalcemic cats (persistently increased iCa concentration [>1.40 mmol/l]) were identified retrospectively via a medical database search; additional hypercalcemic and normocalcemic cats were recruited prospectively. Data regarding routine biochemical and urine testing, diagnostic imaging and additional blood testing were obtained. Serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity was used as a marker of bone turnover. Serum calcitonin concentration was analyzed using a previously validated immunoradiometric assay. Hypercalcemic cats with an increased calcitonin concentration (>0.9 ng/L) were termed responders. Group comparisons were performed using a Mann-Whitney test for continuous variables and a χ2 test for categorical variables. Spearman’s correlation coefficient was used to examine the relationships between calcitonin, iCa and ALP.

Twenty-six hypercalcemic and 25 normocalcemic cats were recruited. Only 5/26 (19.2%) of the hypercalcemic cats were identified as responders, and all were diagnosed with idiopathic hypercalcemia. There was no significant correlation between the concentrations of calcitonin and iCa (p = 0.929), calcitonin and ALP (p = 0.917) or iCa and ALP (p = 0.678) in hypercalcemic cats, however, a significant negative correlation was observed between calcitonin and ALP (p = 0.037) when normocalcemic and hypercalcemic cats with an elevated calcitonin concentration were analyzed together.

The expected increase in calcitonin concentration was present in only a small subset of hypercalcemic cats; no correlation was found between iCa and calcitonin concentration. The inverse relationship between calcitonin and ALP in cats with increased calcitonin concentrations suggests that the ability of calcitonin to correct hypercalcemia may be related to the degree of bone turnover.

## Linked entities

- **Proteins:** Calca (calcitonin-related polypeptide alpha)
- **Chemicals:** ionized calcium (PubChem CID 271), alkaline phosphatase (PubChem CID 18985873)
- **Diseases:** hypercalcemia (MONDO:0001566)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** calcitonin [NCBI Gene 101094539]
- **Diseases:** hypercalcemia (MESH:D006934), bone turnover (MESH:D001847)
- **Chemicals:** iCa (-)
- **Species:** Felis catus (cat, species) [taxon 9685]

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11182001/full.md

## References

54 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11182001/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11182001