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Treatment options for hypercalcemia after cosmetic oil injections: Lessons from human tissue cultures and a pilot intervention study

Sam Kafai Yahyavi, Simone Theilade, Ditte Hansen, Jais Oliver Berg, Christine Hjorth Andreassen, Mette Lorenzen, Anne Jørgensen, Anders Juul, Jens Faber, Ebbe Eldrup, Martin Blomberg Jensen

2021Bone15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Granuloma formation following self-administered cosmetic oil injections can lead to severe hypercalcemia and renal calcifications due to extra-renal vitamin D activation. This translational study aims to identify Prednisolone sparing therapeutics for hypercalcemia after development of granulomatous disease secondary to paraffin oil injections. MATERIALS AND METHODS: ). In a retrospective study, we included data before and during different treatments of 21 men with paraffin oil induced granulomatous hypercalcemia (46 treatment courses) where serum calcium, parathyroid hormone, vitamin D metabolites, creatinine and inflammatory markers were measured. RESULTS: after 48 h (both p < 0.05). Prednisolone was the first treatment option in most men and lowered serum levels of ionized calcium after 1, 2, 3 and 6 months compared with baseline (p < 0.05). Ketoconazole or Hydroxychloroquine had no significant effect on serum calcium levels and were unable to reduce the concomitant daily Prednisolone doses (p > 0.05). Azathioprine did not reduce calcium levels. However, addition of Tacrolimus to Prednisolone treatment enabled a reduction in Prednisolone dose after 3 months (p = 0.014), but with no additional effect on calcium homeostasis. CONCLUSION: This study verifies that Prednisolone is an effective treatment and suggests that calcineurin inhibitors may be used as Prednisolone sparing treatment for paraffin oil-induced granulomatous hypercalcemia. Randomized clinical trials are needed to determine clinical efficacy.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineIntervention (counseling)SurgeryNursingFacial Rejuvenation and Surgery TechniquesBone health and treatmentsSarcoidosis and Beryllium Toxicity Research