A total of 918 cases (Fig. 1) of possible TIO were identified as consulting in the time period 2008–2018, after removal of 5 cases with no linkable Danish ID record and 3 that had not been resident in the country for one year, and 37 cases that were coded as familial hypophosphatemia (ICD-10 code E833A1). The total follow-up time for the 918 persons enrolled in the analysis was 2,491 person years from diagnosis index date ('Possible TIO'), with a median follow-up time of 1.7 years (range 0.0 to 11.0 years) and a mean follow-up time of 2.7 years (SD 2.7). Competing causes and differential diagnoses: Of the 918 persons with a case definition of Possible TIO, one had a history of adult onset Fanconi syndrome and five had a history of multiple myeloma, which are potential competing causes of hypophosphatemia. At most, this would cause less than a 1% overestimation of TIO cases in the following. However, of these six cases met the subsequent criteria (Probable or Definitive TIO) or received advanced imaging.
Incidence of TIO
Fewer than five persons (< 0.008 cases per 100,000) met the protocol case definition of definitive TIO, i.e. the required combination of diagnosis code, advanced imaging and prescriptions filled for one-alpha-hydroxylated vitamin D. Statistics Denmark rules for data privacy do not permit analysis of groups with fewer than five members so additional details cannot be presented for this subcategory. The study identified 15 cases of possible TIO who also underwent advanced imaging, corresponding to 0.024 per 100,000 patient years. The imaging used was F-18-FDG in 14 cases and Ga-68-DOTATOC in one case. A further 67 cases met the definition of probable TIO after exclusion of CKD and iron infusion as competing causes (Fig. 1), corresponding to 0.11 cases per 100,000 patient years (Table 1 and Fig. 2). The combined incidence of these two categories, after removing overlapping cases, was 80 persons or 0.13 per 100,000 patient years, i.e. about eight new cases per year in the country.
Table 1 N and Incidence rate per 100,000 by operational group, annually and across the period of study Adult-Onset TIO
If restricting the analysis to subjects with adult-onset disease, the incidence rate of Possible TIO with advanced imaging was 0.027 per 100,000 patient years, while the incidence rate of Probable TIO with exclusion of competing causes was 0.076 per 100,000 patient years and the combined incidence of the two was 0.10 per 100,000 patient years.
Prevalence of TIO
The contact prevalence (persons consulting) varied over the duration of the study with 2015 having the highest contact prevalence for probable TIO (Suppl Fig. 1) and 2018 the highest contact prevalence for possible TIO with advanced imaging (data not shown). For the most recent year, 2018, there were 27 patients—17 women and 10 men—still consulting after either possible TIO with advanced imaging (N = 7) or the case definition of probable TIO (N = 22 as categories overlap), corresponding to a combined contact prevalence of 0.47 per 100,000 persons.
In the sub analysis restricted to subjects aged 18 or over, there were 15 cases consulting in 2018 after either a possible TIO with advanced imaging (N = 6) or a probable TIO after excluding competing causes (N = 10), for a combined contact prevalence of 0.325 per 100,000 persons.
The population prevalence includes all patients who remained alive and had no Danish healthcare record of having undergone curative radiotherapy or surgery. Population prevalence increased over the study period (Fig. 3). The total number of persons alive in Denmark in 2018 who met this criterion was 72 for possible TIO with imaging and probable TIO combined, or 1.25 per 100,000.
Adult-Onset TIO
In 2018, there were 41 persons alive with onset at age 18 or over who met the criterion for possible TIO with imaging and/or probable TIO after excluding competing causes, giving a maximum population prevalence of 0.89 per 100,000 persons.
Demographics for TIO at the Time of Diagnosis (Table 2 and 3)
The demographics differed considerably between the Possible TIO with advanced imaging category, where 60% of patients were men and the mean age was 61.8 years, and the Probable TIO category which had two thirds women and a much younger mean age of 32.1 years. The age range was considerable in both groups, however, with the youngest patients being 14 and less than a year old while the oldest were 89 and 97.8 years old, respectively. The diagnoses coded at the initial presentation for the total population and the adult population specifically, are shown in table XE for reference.
Table 2 Demographic characteristics by operational definition Table 3 Diagnosis codes at presentation, by operational definition, total vs adult onset population Prognosis
We considered patients cured of TIO once a record had been made of them undergoing tumor surgery or radiotherapy in Denmark and no longer filling prescriptions for alpha-hydroxylated vitamin D treatment. The patient flow into one-alpha-hydroxylated vitamin D treatment, radiotherapy and surgery is summarized below (Table 4). Even when combining groups B and C, the total number of patients receiving radiotherapy or tumor surgery was below the reporting threshold of five cases. Survival prospects were very good with only 8 deaths among the 80 cases with Possible TIO with advanced imaging or Probable TIO, corresponding to a mortality rate of only 1% per year. Given the low number of deaths we did not calculate a standardized mortality rate as it would have a wide confidence interval.
Table 4 Treatment, cure and mortality by TIO operational definition