Treatment of Postmenopausal Hyperparathyroidism With Norethindrone

Abstract
• In 15 postmenopausal women with mild primary hyperparathyroidism, the long-term effect of norethindrone therapy (5 mg/d) on forearm bone mineral content (FMC) was evaluated. The FMC rose from 810 ± 39 (SEM) mg/cm at baseline to 841 ± 41 mg/cm after 2 years of treatment, representing a mean bone mineral gain of 1.9% per year. The majority of this bone gain occurred during the first 6 months of treatment. The rate of increase in FMC in the first 6 months was ± 3.71 ± 0.12mg/cm per month compared with -0.35 ±0.51 mg/cm per month during the second year. Fat-corrected FMC was measured to determine whether the bone gain was real or reflected a decrease in fat mass. There was a similar rise in fat-corrected FMC (from 885 ± 36 mg/cm at baseline to 909±39 mg/cm at 2 years). The difference between fat-corrected and uncorrected FMC, however, decreased slightly on norethindrone treatment (from 75.2 ±11.9 mg/cm at baseline to 67.8 ±11.8 mg/cm at 12 months), indicating a reduction in the subcutaneous fat layer. We conclude that norethindrone therapy in postmenopausal women with mild primary hyperparathyroidism produces a gain in bone mass that is sustained for at least 2 years. (Arch Intern Med. 1990;150:1951-1953)