AI Article Synopsis

  • - Nutritional rickets, caused by low vitamin D and calcium intake, can be identified through serum alkaline phosphatase (AP) activity levels, which indicate mineralization issues.
  • - A study involving 122 children with rickets and 119 controls found that those with rickets had significantly higher serum AP levels (812 U/L) compared to those without (245 U/L), suggesting a strong link between AP and nutritional rickets.
  • - An AP level above 350 U/L effectively identified rickets with high sensitivity (93%) and specificity (92), highlighting AP as a cost-effective screening tool, though further validation is needed for broader application.

Article Abstract

Context: Nutritional rickets results from the interaction of low vitamin D status and limited calcium intake. Serum alkaline phosphatase (AP) activity is a biomarker of impaired mineralization in rickets.

Objective: To assess the performance of serum AP activity in identifying nutritional rickets in calcium-deprived Nigerian children.

Methods: We reanalyzed data from a case-control study of children with active rickets and matched control subjects without rickets, using a multivariate logistic regression to assess the odds of rickets associated with AP activity, adjusting for age, sex, and weight-for-age z-score.

Results: A total of 122 children with rickets and 119 controls were included. Rachitic children had a mean (±SD) age of 54 ± 29 months, and 55 (45.1%) were male. Cases and controls had low dietary calcium intakes (216 ± 87 and 214 ± 96 mg/day, respectively). Serum AP activity levels in cases and controls were 812 ± 415 and 245 ± 78 U/L, respectively (P < 0.001). AP was negatively associated with 25-hydroxyvitamin D values (r = -0.34; P < 0.001). In the adjusted model, the odds ratio (95% CI) receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.978. AP > 350 U/L identified nutritional rickets in Nigerian children with sensitivity 0.93, specificity 0.92, positive likelihood ratio 11.3, and negative likelihood ratio 0.07.

Conclusion: An AP > 350 U/L effectively discriminated between Nigerian children with and without nutritional rickets. AP is a low-cost biochemical test that could be used to screen for nutritional rickets, but cutoff values require validation in other populations, and laboratory values need to be standardized for widespread population studies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/clinem/dgab328DOI Listing

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