Title: Osteoporosis Treatment
1Osteoporosis Treatment
2osteoporosis
- Bone undergoes a continuous remodeling process
involving bone resorption and formation. - Increase resorption more than formation ?
osteoporosis
3Characteristics
- Abnormal loss of bone skeletal fragility
predisposing to fractures. - In osteoporosisbone mineral density(BMD) is
reduced bone microarchitecture is disrupted.
4Causes and risk factors
- Age gt 65 years
- Occurs in elderly, most pronounced in
postmenopausal women - Malabsorption syndrome
- As a manifestation of endocrine disease
(thyrotoxicosis or hyperparathyroidism) - Alcohol abuse cigarette smoking
- Long-term use of glucocorticoids or other drugs
- Idiopathic
5- Long-term use of Glucocorticoidsmight induce
osteoporosis by the following mechanisms - 1- Decreasing Calcium intestinal absorption
- 2- Increasing Calcium renal excretion
- 3- Decreasing bone formation
Antagonizing vit.D
6Osteoporosis
- In osteoporosis there is decreased bone mineral
density (BMD) disrupted bone architecture - This would increase fractures liability (common
in hip bone and vertebrae) - Three hormones are responsible for Calcium
homeostasis - Calcitonin
- Parathyroid hormone
- 1,25-OH-D3 production
7Drugs used in osteoporosis
- Hormones
- Calcium
- Vit D
- Hormone replacement therapy (estrogen)
- Raloxifene (Selective Estorgen Receptor
Modulator) - Calcitonin
- Teriparatide ( r-PTH)
- Nonhormones
- bisphosphonates
All drugs inhibit bone resorption except
teriparatide
8Calcitonin
- A 32-amino-acid peptide secreted by
parafollicular C cells of the thyroid
gland - Calcitonin acts to decrease calcium concentration
via calcitonin receptors in osteoclasts, GIT,
kidney brain - Inhibits osteoclastic activity in bones
- Inhibits Ca2/phosphate reabsorption by the renal
tubules - Inhibits Ca2 absorption by the intestine
- Postmenopausal women tend to possess lower levels
of plasma calcitonin levels
Gastrin, pancreozymin (CCK), and increased serum
Ca? ?secretion of calcitonin
9Calcitonin
- Pharamcological Actions
- Osteoclasts size motility are decreased leading
to inhibition of bone resorption - It inhibits the parathyroid hormone-induced
acceleration of bone-turnover - It increases renal excretion of Na, K, Ca2,
Mg2, and phosphate
- Pharmaceutical formulations include
- Nasal spray
- Parenteral formulation for IM or S.C. injection
10Calcitonin Pharmacokinetics
- Rapid absorption from injection sites (slow with
the addition of gelatin) - T1/2 20 minutes
- Weak protein binding
- Hepatic (mainly) and renal metabolism
- Nasal spray calcitonin has 5-50 bioavailability
when compared to IM route
11Calcitonins adverse effects
- Dose dependent.
- Increased with parenteral route.
- They include
- Anorexia, nausea, and facial flushing
- Urticaria or anaphylaxis are rare
- Long-term use may lead to the formation of
antibodies that are possibly ineffective - Drug-drug interaction calcitonin thiazide K
depletion
Long term use ? ?Ca and phosphate ? impaired bone
formation
12Vitamin D
- Vitamin DCa2 absorption activation
- PTH stimulates 25-OH-vitaminD3 1-a-hydroxylase in
the kidney - This enzyme catalyzes hyroxylation of
25-OH-vitamin D3, to its active form
1,25-dihydroxy vitamin D3 (calcitriol) - This activated form of vitamin D increases the
absorption of Ca2 by the intestine via
calbindin(calcium binding protein)
13Preperations of Vit.D
- include
- Vitamin D2 (ergocalciferol)
- Vitamin D3 (adequate amounts of vitamin D3 can
be made in the skin after 10-15 min of sun
exposure 2 times per week) - 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin-D (calcitriol), the active
form
Usually D2 or D3 are given with Ca If there was
impaired activation of vit.D you can give
calcitriol as a supplement
14uses
- Can be used in hypo and hyperparathyroidism
Recommendation
- 800 IU per day is recommended for postmenopausal
women
Vitamin D receptors (VDR) activation in the
intestine, bone, kidney, parathyroid gland cells
leads to the maintenance of calcium and phosphate
levels in the blood for the maintenance of bone
content
15Low levels of vit.D? ?mineralization of bone High
levels ? potentiates the action of PTH
In toxicity only
16Calcium
Pharmaceutical forms
- Ca2 chloride, Ca2 citrate, Ca2lactate,
Ca2gluconate(IV because has least vascular
irritation), and Ca2carbonate (taken orally) - Ca2 carbonate converts to Ca2 in the body which
contains 40 elemental Ca
Recommendation
1500 mg per day for post menopausal women
17Calcium Adverse Effects
- Oral calcium may cause
- Gastric irritation, nausea constipation
- Excessive Ca2? hypercalcemic toxicity especially
in the presence of high vitamin D intake - Decrease tetracycline absorption
18Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
- Estrogen deficiency causes bone loss via
increased bone resorption. - Loss of estrogen? ?IL-1, IL-6 TNF-a? enhance
osteoclast replication differentiation - HRT Beneficial Effects
- HRT increases BMD ? beneficial in vertebral
non-vertebral fractures - Control of menopausal urogenital symptoms
- Reduced risk of colon cancer
- HRT Risk
- ?CV Cerebrovasculardiseases, gallbladder
disease, DVT, pulmonary thromboembolism,breast
cancer
19Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators
(SERMs)Raloxifene
- A non-hormonal agent that binds to estrogen
receptors - They induce estrogen-like effects in some but not
all tissues (specific) - Raloxifene(60 mg/day) is the only approved member
for prevention treatment of osteoporosis - Pharmacokinetics
- 60 absorption from oral route
- Bioavailability 2 because of 1st pass
metabolism and conjugation - high plasma protein binding.
- Cholestyramine reduces absorption enterohepatic
cycling.
20RaloxifeneEffects on BMD and Bone Turnover
- 30-50 reduction of vertebral fractures
- Non-vertebral fractures are either
non-significantly affected or reduced in women
with severe vertebral factures - Significant increase of BMD in the lumbar spine
and femoral neck - Reduction of bone turnover markers
21RaloxifeneExtra-Skeletal Benefits and Adverse
Effects
- Reduction of total lipids and LDL-cholesterol
- Reduction of CVD risk only in women at high risk
or with established CVD - Reduction in the incidences of estrogen
receptor-dependent invasive breast cancer in
low-risk osteoporotic postmenopausal women - Adverse Effects Are safe and well-tolerated
- Hot flashes leg cramps
- Infrequent venous thromboembolism (VTE),
unrelated to leg cramps - Contraindicated in patients with VTE history
22Bisphosphonates
- Used for osteoporosis, Pagets disease,
malignacyhypercalcemia and bone metastases - They have high affinity for bone tissue.
- 50 is excreted by the kidney. The rest taken up
by osteoclast - Pharmacokinetics
- 2 absorption during fasting
- Food reduces absorption
- T1/2 1 hour
- Administered 1 hour before meals with water only.
The patient is advised to take it in an upright
position and remain so for 30 to 60 minutes in
order to prevent esophagitis and esophageal
ulcers.
23BisphosphonatesMechanism of Action
- Pyrophosphate-like
- Etidronate
- Mechanism
- Metabolized in cells forming non-functional
cytotoxic ATP molecules - Cell death of osteoclast? ?bone resorption
- Nitrogen-containing
- AlendronateRisedronate
- Mechanism
- 1000-times more potent
- Blocking the enzyme farnesyldiphosphatesynthase
(FPPS) in the HMG-CoAreductase (the mevalonic
acid) pathway - This prevents the formation of two metabolites
essential for connecting small proteins to the
cell membrane of osteoclast (prenylation) - Proper sub-cellular protein trafficking is
impaired
24BisphosphonatesAdverse Effects
- N-containing bisphosphonates are contraindicted
with esophageal pathology. (they may cause
gastroesophageal reflux) - IV ? fever and flu like symptoms (after 1st
infusion) - ?risk for electrolyte disturbances
- In chronic renal failure, the drugs are excreted
much more slowly, thus dose adjustment is
required. - At high doses, etidronate may cause osteomalacia.
25Parathyroid Hormone (PTH)
- PTH acts to increase the concentration of calcium
in the blood by acting upon PTH receptors in
three organs - Bone Release of calcium from the large
reservoir contained in the bones - KidneyReabsorption of calcium and magnesium from
distal tubules and the thick ascending limb and
increases the excretion of phosphate - Intestine Absorption of calcium in the intestine
indirectly by increasing the production of
activated vitamin D in the kidney.
26Bone physiologic effects of PTH
- In high amounts of PTH (physiologic PTH) ?
induction of bone resorption(stimulate
osteoclasts) - In small quantity or intermittent amounts of PTH?
bone formation (stimulates osteoblasts)
27Parathyroid Hormone (PTH)Teriparatide
rh-PTH(1-34)
- Recombinant hPTH(1-34) shows good efficacy
against vertebral non-vertebral fractures in
postmenopausal women. - It increases BMD at skeleton sites except radius
- It increases BMD at the spine in severe
osteoporotic men glucocorticoid-induced
osteoporosis postmenopausal women. - Adverse effects
- Nausea, headache, dizziness
- Infrequently leg cramps
- Occasional hypercalcemia and/or hypercalciuria
28- A 58-year old postmenopausal woman waas sent for
dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry to evaluate her
BMD of her lumbar spine, femoral neck and total
hip. The test results revealed significantly low
BMD in all sites.
29- Chronic use of which of the following drugs is
MOST likely to have contributed to this woman's
osteoporosis? - Lovastatin
- Metformin
- Prednisone
- Propranalol
- Thiazide diuretic
prednisone
30- If this patient began oral therapy with
alendronate, she would be advised to drink large
quantities of water with the tablets and remain
in the upright position for at least 30 min and
until eating the first meal of the day. These
instructions would be given to decrease the risk
of - Cholelithiasis
- Diarrhea
- Constipation
- Erosive esophagitis
- Pernicious anemia
Erosive esophagitis
31- The patients condition was not sufficiently
controlled with alendronate, so she began therapy
with a nasal spray containing a protein that
inhibit bone resorption. The drug contained in
the nasal spray was - Calcitonin
- Calcitriol
- Cinacalcet
- Cortisol
- Teriparatide
Calcitonin