Romosozumab and denosumab are monoclonal antibodies for the treatment of osteoporosis. Both have a rapid offset of effect resulting in loss of bone density (BMD) gained on-treatment and, in some ...cases, multiple vertebral fractures following treatment cessation. We recently reported disappointing results from transitioning patients from denosumab to intravenous zoledronate at the time the next denosumab injection is due. The present report re-assesses the role of bisphosphonates following the use of denosumab. In the FRAME trial, osteoporotic women were randomized to romosozumab or placebo for 1 year, then both groups were provided with open-label denosumab for the subsequent 2 years. In women completing this study at our center, we offered treatment with either oral or intravenous bisphosphonates. In the eleven women opting for intravenous treatment, zoledronate was given after a median delay of 65 days from trial-end, in the hope that this might increase skeletal uptake of the drug and, thereby, its efficacy to maintain bone density. In these women, spine BMD was 17.3% above baseline at trial-end, and still 12.3% above baseline a year later, a 73% (CI: 61%, 85%) retention of the treatment benefit. The comparable BMD figures for the total hip were 10.7 and 9.2% above baseline, a 87% (CI: 77%, 98%) retention of treatment effect. In contrast, those not receiving treatment after the conclusion of the FRAME trial lost 80–90% of the BMD gained on-trial in the following 12 months. Women treated with risedronate showed an intermediate response. In the zoledronate group, mean PINP 6 months post-FRAME was 23 ± 4 µg/L and at 12 months it was 47 ± 8 µg/L, suggesting that repeat zoledronate dosing is needed at 1 year to maintain the BMD gains. In conclusion, delaying administration of intravenous bisphosphonate when transitioning from short-term denosumab appears to increase the extent to which the gains in BMD are maintained.
In this randomized trial, women 65 years of age or older who had osteopenia received four infusions of zoledronate or normal saline at 18-month intervals. Zoledronate was associated with a ...significantly lower risk of fragility fractures than placebo.
The pathophysiological nature of the common ABCG2 gout and hyperuricemia associated variant Q141K (rs2231142) remains undefined. Here, we use a human interventional cohort study (ACTRN12615001302549) ...to understand the physiological role of ABCG2 and find that participants with the Q141K ABCG2 variant display elevated serum urate, unaltered FEUA, and significant evidence of reduced extra-renal urate excretion. We explore mechanisms by generating a mouse model of the orthologous Q140K Abcg2 variant and find male mice have significant hyperuricemia and metabolic alterations, but only subtle alterations of renal urate excretion and ABCG2 abundance. By contrast, these mice display a severe defect in ABCG2 abundance and function in the intestinal tract. These results suggest a tissue specific pathobiology of the Q141K variant, support an important role for ABCG2 in urate excretion in both the human kidney and intestinal tract, and provide insight into the importance of intestinal urate excretion for serum urate homeostasis.
A case series of six women with postmenopausal osteoporosis who had received continuous denosumab for 7 years and were then given a single infusion of zoledronate (5 mg) is reported. During denosumab ...treatment, bone mineral density (BMD) in the spine increased 18.5% (
P
= 0.006), and total hip BMD by 6.9% (
P
= 0.03). Post-zoledronate BMDs were measured 18–23 months after treatment, and there were significant declines at each site (
P
spine
= 0.043,
P
hip
= 0.005). Spine BMD remained significantly above the pre-denosumab baseline (+9.3%,
P
= 0.003), but hip BMD was not significantly different from baseline (−2.9%). At the time of post-zoledronate BMD measurements, serum PINP levels were between 39 and 60 μg/L (mean 52 μg/L), suggesting that the zoledronate treatment had not adequately inhibited bone turnover. It is concluded that this regimen of zoledronate administration is not adequate to preserve the BMD gains that result from long-term denosumab treatment.
Aim
The aim of this work is to assess the safety and efficacy of two oral zoledronate preparations by determining their effects on bone resorption in healthy postmenopausal women.
Methods
The ...preparations studied were zoledronic acid in enteric‐coated capsules or a microparticle preparation of zoledronic acid in these capsules. Bone resorption was measured as β‐C‐telopeptideof type I collagen (CTX) in fasting serum. Separate cohorts, each of five women, were recruited and allocated in sequence to single doses of 20 mg, 40 mg, or 60 mg of oral zoledronate.
Results
Zoledronate 20 mg enteric capsules were well tolerated, reduced serum CTX by a median 51% at 1 week, but by only 17% at 1 month. Doses of 40 or 60 mg of this preparation produced APR and/or gastrointestinal symptoms in more than half of participants. With these doses, median CTX reduction at 1 week was >80%, ~70% at 1 month, but only ~30% at 6 months. Enteric capsules containing microparticles of zoledronate 20 mg reduced CTX by a median 53% at 1 week, with offset over 3 months. Two or three of these capsules dosed weekly reduced CTX by ~50% at 1 month, and by ~30% at 3 and 6 months.
Conclusions
Oral zoledronate 20 mg circumvents the problem of APR symptoms but, even with multiple doses, the anti‐resorptive effect is smaller and less sustained than with intravenous zoledronate. Probably a viable oral regimen of zoledronate dosing at intervals of weeks to months could be developed, but the advantage of infrequent dosing would be lost.
Background The aim of this study was to compare the frequency and volume of dual energy CT (DECT) urate deposits in people with asymptomatic hyperuricaemia and symptomatic gout. Methods We analysed ...DECT scans of the feet from asymptomatic individuals with serum urate ≥540 µmol/L (n=25) and those with crystal proven gout without clinically apparent tophi (n=33). Results DECT urate deposits were observed in 6/25 (24%) participants with asymptomatic hyperuricaemia, 11/14 (79%) with early gout (predefined as disease duration ≤3 years) and 16/19 (84%) with late gout (p<0.001). DECT urate deposition was observed in both joints and tendons in the asymptomatic hyperuricaemia group, but significantly less frequently than in those with gout (p≤0.001 for both joint and tendon sites). The volume of urate deposition was also significantly lower in those with asymptomatic hyperuricaemia, compared with the early and the late gout groups (p<0.01 for both comparisons). Similar urate volumes were observed in the early and late gout groups. Conclusions Although subclinical urate deposition can occur in people with asymptomatic hyperuricaemia, these deposits occur more frequently and at higher volumes in those with symptomatic gout. These data suggest that a threshold of urate crystal volume may be required before symptomatic disease occurs.