Causes of high alkaline phosphatase
include bone growth, healing fracture, acromegaly,
osteogenic sarcoma, liver or bone metastases, leukemia,
myelofibrosis, and rarely myeloma. Alkaline phosphatase is
used as a tumor marker.1,2
In rickets and osteomalacia, serum calcium and
phosphorus are low to normal, and alkaline phosphatase may
be normal or increased.
Hypervitaminosis D may cause elevations in alkaline
phosphatase.
In Paget disease of bone there is often isolated
elevation of serum alkaline phosphatase. Some of the
highest levels of serum ALP are seen in Paget disease.
Hyperthyroidism, by its effects upon bone, may elevate
alkaline phosphatase. There is evidence that thyroid
hormone (T3) acts to stimulate bone alkaline
phosphatase activity through an osteoblast nuclear
receptor-mediated process.3
Hyperparathyroidism, in some patients.
Pseudohyperparathyroidism.
Chronic alcohol ingestion (in chronic alcoholism,
alkaline phosphatase may be normal or increased, but often
with high AST (SGOT) and/or high bilirubin and especially
with high GGT; MCV may be high).
Biliary obstruction (tenfold increase may be seen with
carcinoma of the head of pancreas, choledocholithiasis);
cholestasis; GGT also high. Cholecystitis with cholangitis.
(In most patients with cholecystitis and cholangitis who do
not have a common duct stone, alkaline phosphatase is
within normal limits or only slightly increased.)
Sclerosing cholangitis (eg, with ulcerative colitis),
although importantly, 3% of cases of symptomatic sclerosing
cholangitis may have normal serum ALP.4
Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography might be considered
then in patients with diseases known to be associated with
primary sclerosing cholangitis and with appropriate
symptomatology even though ALP level is normal. Primary or
metastatic tumor in liver: there may be marked increase and
GGT is often high. Only three laboratory markers were
consistently abnormal, in evaluating for metastatic
carcinoma of breast, prior to clinical detectability of
metastases: these were alkaline phosphatase, GGT and
CEA.2
Cirrhosis, especially in primary biliary cirrhosis, in
which fivefold or more increases are seen.
Gilbert syndrome: Increase in intestinal alkaline
phosphatase is seen.5
Hepatitis: Moderate increases in alkaline phosphatase
occur in viral hepatitis, but greater elevations of the
transaminases (AST (SGOT), ALT (SGPT)) are usually
found.
Fatty metamorphosis of liver (moderate increase occurs
in acute fatty liver).
Diabetes mellitus, diabetic hepatic lipidosis.
Infiltrative liver diseases (eg, sarcoid, TB,
amyloidosis, abscess).
Sepsis. Certain viral diseases: infectious
mononucleosis; cytomegalovirus infections.
Postoperative cholestasis. Pancreatitis, carcinoma of
pancreas, cystic fibrosis.
Pulmonary infarct (1-3 weeks after embolism. Healing
infarcts in other organs, including kidney, may also cause
increased alkaline phosphatase); other situations in which
angiofibroplasia occurs, such as healing in a large
decubitus ulcer.
Tumors, especially hypernephroma; neoplastic ectopic
production (Regan, Nagao isoenzymes).
Fanconi syndrome.
Peptic ulcer, erosion. Intestinal strangulation or
obstruction, or ulcerative lesion. Steatorrhea,
malabsorption (from bone, secondary to vitamin D
deficiency). Ulcerative colitis with pericholangitis, other
erosive lesions of colon.
Congestive heart failure.
Parenteral hyperalimentation of glucose, intravenous
albumin administration.
Familial hyperphosphatasemia.
Idiopathic.
Drugs - estrogens (large doses), birth control agents,
methyltestosterone, phenothiazines, oral hypoglycemic
agents, erythromycin, or any drug producing
hypersensitivity or toxic cholestasis. Many commonly and
uncommonly used drugs elevate alkaline phosphatase, and
tenfold increases may be seen with drug cholestasis.
Causes of low alkaline phosphatase are
said to include: Hypothyroidism - but most hypothyroid
patients have normal alkaline phosphatase.
Pernicious anemia - in very few patients.
Hypophosphatasia: Very low alkaline phosphatase values
are found in the presence of normocalcemia or hypocalcemia.
This diagnosis may be confirmed by quantitation of urinary
phosphoethanolamine.
Malnutrition has been reported to relate to low values,
but in practice, diseases causing malnutrition relate often
to high alkaline phosphatase results (eg, disseminated
neoplasia).
Some drugs (clofibrate, azathioprine, estrogens and
estrogens in combination with androgens) lower serum ALP
activity.