AI Article Synopsis

  • Accelerated bone turnover, where bone loss outpaces new bone formation, is a key factor in postmenopausal osteoporosis, making the inhibition of bone resorption a critical strategy for prevention.
  • Hormone replacement therapy effectively returns bone turnover to premenopausal levels, while stronger treatments like bisphosphonates and RANKL antibodies can excessively suppress bone turnover, potentially harming bone quality and strength.
  • Recent findings highlight the risks associated with long-term use of potent bisphosphonates, such as osteonecrosis of the jaw and micro-crack accumulation, suggesting that merely reducing turnover may not be the best goal for osteoporosis treatment.

Article Abstract

Accelerated bone turnover with bone resorption exceeding bone formation is a major mechanism underlying postmenopausal bone loss and hence the development of osteoporosis. Accordingly, inhibition of bone resorption is a rational approach for the prevention of osteoporosis. In this context, the most logical option, hormone replacement therapy, reverses the rate of bone turnover to premenopausal levels, whereas the magnitude of inhibition by amino-bisphosphonates and the recently introduced anti-receptor activator of NFkappaB ligand (RANKL) antibody often exceeds this. As bone turnover has crucial implications for the continuous renewal of bone tissue, the over-suppression of bone turnover has potential consequences for bone quality and strength. Long-term treatment with potent bisphosphonates has recently been associated with osteonecrosis of the jaw and dose-dependent increases in micro-crack accumulation in animals. Although these observations are the subject of ongoing discussions, it is timely to discuss whether the over-suppression of bone turnover below premenopausal levels is really our ultimate goal when defining the success criteria for antiresorptive agents. In this review, the implications of high and excessively low bone turnover of endogenous origin for bone quality, fracture risk and integrity of the jaw are discussed. In addition, animal and clinical research revealing initial findings regarding the potential adverse effects of drug-induced suppression of bone remodeling are summarised. The inhibition of bone resorption, which is either transient between doses (e.g. with calcitonin) or does not exceed premenopausal levels (with hormone replacement therapy or selective estrogen receptor modulators), is preferable because it not only provides similar antifracture efficacy but can also assist in the maintenance of the dynamic repair of micro-cracks/micro-fractures.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2165/00003495-200666150-00002DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

bone turnover
24
bone
15
bone resorption
12
premenopausal levels
12
inhibition bone
8
hormone replacement
8
replacement therapy
8
turnover premenopausal
8
over-suppression bone
8
bone quality
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!