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Novel Precision Medicine Approach to Treatment of Osteoporosis Based on Bone Turnover

M

Madhumathi Rao

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 4

Conditions

Age-Related Osteoporosis

Treatments

Drug: Teriparatide
Drug: Alendronate

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05151484
R01AG072797 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
70781

Details and patient eligibility

About

Osteoporosis affects 24.5% of women over 65 and results in fracture-related hospital admissions exceeding those of heart attacks, strokes and breast cancer combined. Current treatment options do not account for differences between age-related and estrogen deficiency related osteoporosis, because of the need for bone biopsies for determination. This study will establish a paradigm-shifting individualized treatment protocol for age-related osteoporosis and a non-invasive method for its determination, thereby reducing the major health problems and enormous burden on society and the elderly related to this disease.

Full description

Osteoporosis is a health problem of major proportions. It affects more than 40 million Americans and results in more than 2 million fractures annually among Medicare patients alone. Hospital admissions for osteoporotic fractures exceed those of heart attacks, strokes and breast cancer combined. Osteoporosis is commonly considered a disease associated with menopause. This estrogen deficiency related bone loss is characterized by high bone turnover with increased resorption without commensurate changes in bone formation. It is in contrast to age-related bone loss, which starts as early as in the fourth decade of life and continues with increasing age. Age-related bone loss is usually associated with lower bone turnover and decreased bone formation is the main abnormality. Current therapies do not address age-related bone loss and the special needs of the age-related osteoporosis population is currently ignored. This is to a great degree due to difficulties associated with the bone biopsy necessary for determination of bone turnover status. Thus, the current standard of care relies on starting with an antiresorber, which is less effective in age-related osteoporosis, and in fact impedes the effectiveness in this population of the appropriate anabolic medication.

The investigators study seeks to achieve two specific aims: Aim 1) to establish a novel precision medicine approach to treatment of age-related osteoporosis based on recognition of low bone turnover and initial treatment with anabolics, and Aim 2) to find a non-invasive method for diagnosing low bone turnover in osteoporotic patients by measurements of serum carboxylated osteocalcin with validation via the "gold standard" bone biopsy and histomorphometry.

The investigators approach will be to enroll female participants who have been diagnosed with osteoporosis in a prospective, proof of concept study. Patients will undergo bone biopsy and blood draws at baseline. Bone turnover status will be assessed employing histomorphometry. In addition, blood levels of carboxylated osteocalcin will be measured in order to determine their validity - alone or in combination with other bone markers - for diagnosing low bone turnover prevailing in age-related bone loss.

Participants will be grouped according to turnover status. Low-turnover participants will be randomized (1:1) either to treatment with the anabolic teriparatide (Group 1) or with the standard of care antiresorber alendronate (Group 2) for one year. In order to provide the necessary comparison group for the non-invasive assessment of turnover, normal-high turnover participants (Group 3) will be treated with standard of care alendronate for one year. At baseline and at one-year bone mineral density measurements will be performed by DXA and 1-year changes in BMD will be compared between groups. The investigators central hypothesis is that low turnover, age-related osteoporosis needs to be diagnosed and treated differently from estrogen deficiency related osteoporosis. The results will provide a paradigm shift in the treatment of osteoporosis.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

40+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Diagnosed Osteoporosis by DXA (BMD t-score ≤ -2.5 with or without fragility fractures)
  2. Treatment naive with respect to with anabolic or antiresorptive bone drugs.
  3. Premenopausal, menopausal, and post-menopausal females.
  4. 45 years old and older.
  5. Presence or absence of diabetes
  6. Normal levels of Vitamin D
  7. Absence of all exclusion criteria on clinical workup

Patients diagnosed as osteoporotic due to the presence of fragility fractures, but without osteoporotic t-scores, will not be included because they would require fractures as a study endpoint which would entail a multi-center approach. Moreover, abnormal bone quality has been shown to be present in these patients, which requires bone histology for assessment.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Pregnant or trying to become pregnant or are breastfeeding.
  2. Participation in a study of an investigational drug during the past 30 days.
  3. Treatment with anabolic or antiresorptive bone drugs.
  4. Use of systemic anticoagulation (blood thinner)
  5. Planned or anticipated oral surgery within the next 12 months.
  6. Allergy to the antibiotics demeclocycline or tetracycline.
  7. Planning to move out of the area within 18 months of the study.
  8. Inability to stand or sit upright for at least 30 minutes.
  9. Chronic alcoholism and/or drug addiction.
  10. Prior radiation therapy (external beam or implant radiation) involving the skeleton (only if randomized to the bone forming drug (anabolic Forteo®)).
  11. Systemic illnesses or organ diseases that may affect bone (except type 1 or type 2 Diabetes Mellitus).
  12. Clinical condition that may limit study participation (e.g., heart diseases (unstable angina), lung diseases (severe COPD), other infections).
  13. Abnormalities of the esophagus (tube connecting the mouth to the stomach) which delay esophageal emptying such as stricture (narrowing) or achalasia (a condition that prevents normal swallowing).
  14. Have other bone diseases that are not linked to age or menopause.
  15. Have a history of malignancy (cancer), not including non-melanoma skin cancer.
  16. Vitamin D (Calcidiol) level below the normal range (below 20ng/mL).
  17. AFTER RANDOMIZATION: If randomized to Group 1 Teriparatide and radius BMD t-score is less than -3.5 and does not sign consent to continue in the study.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

60 participants in 3 patient groups

Group 1 Low Turnover
Active Comparator group
Description:
Teriparatide (anabolic) For 1 Year
Treatment:
Drug: Teriparatide
Group 2 Low Turnover
Active Comparator group
Description:
Standard of Care - Control: Treated with Alendronate (antiresorber) For 1 Year
Treatment:
Drug: Alendronate
Group 3 Normal-High Turnover
Active Comparator group
Description:
Standard of Care Treatment with Alendronate (antiresorber) For 1 Year
Treatment:
Drug: Alendronate

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Madhumathi Rao, MD; Paul F Netzel, DNP

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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