Title: Osteoporosis Treatment
1Osteoporosis Treatment
2osteoporosis
- Bone undergoes a continuous remodeling, process
involving bone resorption and formation. - Any process that disrupt this balance by
increasing resorption relative to formation
results in osteoporosis
3Drugs used in osteoporosis
- Calcium
- Vit D
- HRT(estrogen)
- Raloxifene (SERM)
- BISPHOPHONATES
- Calcitonin
- Teriparatide ( PTH, recombinant)
4- Abnormal loss of bone skeletal fragility
predisposing to fractures. - In osteoporosis ! bone mineral density (BMD) is
reduced - bone microarchitecture is disrupted.
5- Causes/ Risk factors
- Long-term use of glucocorticoides/ other drugs
- As a manifestation of endocrine disease
(thyrotoxicosis/ hyperparathyroidism) - Malabs syndrome
- Alcohol abuse cigarette smoking
- Age gt 65 yrs
- Idiopathic.
- Occur in elderly in both sexes, \ is most
pronounced in postmenopausal women.
6Osteoporosis
- In osteoporosis there is decreased bone mineral
density (BMD) disrupted bone architecture - This would increase fracture liability
- Three hormones are responsible for Calcium
homeostasis - Calcitonin
- Parathyroid hormone
- 1,25-OH-D3 production
7Calcitonin
- Nature A 32-amino acid-polypeptide secreted by
parafollicular(C-) cells of the thyroid gland - Calcitonin acts to decrease calcium concentration
via calcitonin receptors in osteoclasts, GIT,
kidney brain - Inhibits Ca2 absorption by the intestines
- Inhibits osteoclast activity in bones
- Inhibits Ca2/phosphate reabsorption by the
kidney tubules - Post-menopausal women tend to possess lower
levels of plasma calcitonin levels - Pharmaceutical formulations include
- Nasal spray
- Parenteral formulation for IM or S.C. injection
8Calcitonin
- Pharamcological Actions
- Osteoclasts size motility are decreased leading
to inhibition of bone resorption - It inhibits the parathyroid hormone-induced
acceleration of bone turnover - GIT gastrin pancreozymin or increased serum
Ca2 stimulate calcitonin secretion - It increases renal excretion of Na, K, Ca2,
Mg2, and phosphate
9Calcitonin Pharmacokinetics
- Rapid absorption from injection sites (slow with
addition of gelatin) - Half-life is short of about 20 minutes
- Weak protein binding
- Renal and hepatic metabolism
- Nasal spray calcitonin has 5-50 availability
when compared to IM route
10Calcitonin adverse effects
- Adverse effects are dose-dependent and more
frequent with parenteral use but rarely observed
after nasal spray administration - They include
- Anorexia, nausea, fascial flushing
- Urticaria or anaphylaxis is rare
- Long-term use may lead to formation of antibodies
that possibly are ineffective - Uncommon drug-drug interacions except for K
depletion when calcitonin combined with thiazide
diuretics -
11Calcium and Vitamin D
- Vitamin DCa2 absorption activation
- PTH up-regulates 25-OH-vitaminD3-1-alpha-hydroxyla
se in the kidney - This enzyme activates hyroxylation of
25-OH-vitamin D, to its active form
1,25-dihydroxy vitamin D - This activated form of vitamin D increases the
absorption of Ca2 ions by the intestine via
calbindin
12Calcium and Vitamin D Preparations
- Ca chloride, Ca citrate, Ca lactate, Ca
gluconate, and Ca carbonate (richest Ca source) - Insoluble Ca carbonate contains 40 elemental
Ca2, after conversion to Ca salts in the body - Vitamin D Used forms 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/week - 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin-D (calcitriol), the active
form
13Calcium and Vitamin D
- 1500 mg of Calcium and 800 IU of vitamin D per
day are recommended for postmenopausal women - Vitamin D receptors (VDR) activation in the
intestine, bone, kidney, parathyroid gland cells
leads to the maintenance of calcium and
phosphorus levels in the blood to the
maintenance of bone content - Parathyroid hormone and calcitonin play a role
14Calcium and Vitamin DAdverse Effects
- Oral calcium may cause
- Gastric irritation, nausea constipation
- Excessive Ca? hypercalcemic toxicity especially
in presence of high vitamin D intake - Decreased tetracycline absorption
- Vitamin D
- Overdose ? hypercalcemia hyperphosphatemia
- Renal dysfunction (nephro-lithisis -calcinosis)
- Localised/generalised lowered bone density
- GIT complaints
15Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
- Estrogen deficiency causes bone loss via
increased bone resorption over bone formation - 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 CerebroV diseases, gall bladder
disease, DVT, pulmonary emboli, breast cancer
16Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators
(SERMs)Raloxifene
- Non-hormonal agents that bind to estrogen
receptors with an affinity equivalent to
estradiol - They induce estrogen-like effects in some but not
all tissues - Raloxifene (60 mg/day) is the only approved
member for prevention treatment of osteoporosis - Pharmacokinetics
- It is rapidly absorbed by 60 from oral route
- It has low bioavailability (2) because of
extensive first-pass metabolism and glucuronide
conjugation - It has high plasma protein binding
- Cholestyramine reduces absorption enterohepatic
cycling
17RaloxifeneEffects on BMD and Bone Turnover
- Clinical evidence (MORE) of 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
18RaloxifeneExtra-Skeletal 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 of incidence of the estrogen
receptor-dependent invasive breast cancer in
low-risk osteoporotic post-menopausal women - Adverse Effects It is safe and well-tolerated
- Increased hot flashes leg cramps
- Infrequent venous thromboembolism (VTE), not
related to leg cramps - Contraindicated in patients with VTE history
19Bisphosphonates
- They are used for many bone diseases including
osteoporosis, Pagets disease, malignacy
hypercalcemia and bone metastases - They have a very high affinity for bone tissue,
- 50 of administered dose is excreted unchanged by
the kidney, the remainder is rapidly taken up by
the osteoclasts - Pharmacokinetics
- Poor absorption (2 during fasting)
- Food reduces absorption
- T1/2 1 hour
- Administered 1 hour before meals with water only
20BisphosphonatesMechanism of Action
- Pyrophosphate-like
- Etidronate
- Metabolised in the cell to forming a
nonfunctional cytotoxic ATP molecules - Apoptosis/cell death of osteoclast occurs leading
to a decrease in the breakdown of bone
- Nitrogen-containing
- Alendronate Risedronate
- 1000-times more potent
- Blocking the enzyme farnesyl diphosphate synthase
(FPPS) in the HMG-CoA reductase (the mevalonate)
pathway - This prevents the formation of two metabolites
essential for connecting some small proteins to
the cell membrane (prenylation) - Proper sub-cellular protein trafficking is
impaired as well
J Bone Miner Res. 1997, 12(9) 1358-67 Bone 2003
33 (5) 80511
21BisphosphonatesAdverse Effects
- Oral N-containing bisphosphonates may cause upset
stomach and inflammation erosions of the
esophagus, can be prevented by remaining seated
upright for 30 to 60 minutes after taking the
medication - N-containing bisphosphonates contraindicted with
esophageal pathology - Intravenous bisphosphonates can give fever and
flu-like symptoms after the first infusion only - A slightly increased risk for electrolyte
disturbances - In chronic renal failure, the drugs are excreted
much more slowly, and dose adjustment is required - At high doses, etidronate may cause osteomalcia
22Parathyroid Hormone (PTH)Teriparatide
rhPTH(1-34)
- Recombinant hPTH(1-34) showed good efficacy
against vertebral non-vertebral fractures in
post-menopausal 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 /or hypercalciuria
23Parathyroid Hormone (PTH)Reminder of Activity
- PTH acts to increase the concentration of calcium
in the blood by acting upon PTHR in three organs - Bone It enhances the release of calcium from the
large reservoir contained in the bones - Kidney It enhances active re-absorption of
calcium and magnesium from distal tubules and the
thick ascending limb and increases the excretion
of phosphate - Intestine It enhances the absorption of calcium
in the intestine by increasing the production of
activated vitamin D in the kidney