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The overarching goal of the research program is to define optimal treatment for premenopausal women with clinically significant fracture syndromes that require medical therapy. The investigators hypothesize that romosozumab will be associated with improvements in bone mass and microarchitecture in premenopausal women, and also that the responses and response rates will exceed those observed in premenopausal women treated with teriparatide. The investigators will test this hypothesis in this phase 2 study of 30 premenopausal women with idiopathic osteoporosis (IOP) who will receive 12M of romosozumab 210 mg monthly followed by 12M of denosumab 60 mg SC q6M. Aim 1 will define the within-group effects of this regimen. Aim 2 will compare results from participants treated with romosozumab-denosumab to the investigator's well-characterized historical controls treated with teriparatide followed by denosumab.
Full description
Romosozumab is an anti-sclerostin antibody that provides powerful skeletal benefits through concomitant osteoanabolic and antiresorptive effects on bone. In postmenopausal women, romosozumab is associated with larger increases in spine and hip BMD in comparison to teriparatide. Romosozumab has an extremely low reported nonresponse rate and transition to denosumab after romosozumab leads to further BMD increases and sustained anti-fracture efficacy.
Therefore, the investigators hypothesize that romosozumab will be associated with improvements in bone mass in premenopausal women, and also that the responses and response rates will exceed those observed in premenopausal women treated with teriparatide. The investigators will test this hypothesis in this phase 2 study of 30 premenopausal women with IOP who will receive 12M of romosozumab 210 mg monthly followed by 12M of denosumab 60 mg SC q6M ("romosozumab-denosumab").
Aim 1 will define the within-group effect of romosozumab-denosumab. The primary outcome variable will be the within-group change in areal BMD by DXA at the lumbar spine at 12M. Secondary outcome variables include change in aBMD by DXA at the total hip, femoral neck and 1/3 radius at 12M and change in aBMD at all sites at 24 months.
Aim 2 will compare results from participants treated with romosozumab-denosumab to the well-characterized historical controls treated with 24 months of teriparatide alone, and a subset of those treated with 24 months of teriparatide followed by 12 months of denosumab. The investigators hypothesize that romosozumab over 12M and romosozumab-denosumab over 24M will be associated with larger BMD gains compared to 12M and 24M of teriparatide. The investigators also hypothesize that 24M of romosozumab-denosumab will be associated with comparable BMD gains vs. historical controls treated with 36M of teriparatide-denosumab.
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Inclusion criteria
Premenopausal women, aged 18-48, with regular menses and no historical or biochemical secondary cause of osteoporosis; the lower age limit is to ensure epiphyses are fused, the upper to make it less likely that women will enter menopause during the study. All subjects under age 25 will be screened (bone age radiograph) prior to enrollment to rule out open epiphyses.
Highly effective contraception includes methods considered by the CDC to be >99% effective (e.g. vasectomized partner, tubal ligation, hysterectomy, IUD) as well as a combination of barrier method (condoms) with hormonal contraception considered to be > 90% effective (oral contraceptive pill, patch or ring). Systemic progestin only methods (oral or implanted) are not included due to their effect on systemic estrogen levels and thus potential effects on bone health in this premenopausal population.
Exclusion criteria
Any cardiovascular disease: history of myocardial infarction (MI) or stroke. Normal electrocardiogram (ECG) or ECG with no clinically significant abnormality is required at study entry.
Conditions requiring chronic anticoagulation (coumadin, heparins)
Early follicular phase serum FSH>20 mIU/ml (to exclude perimenopausal women)
Disorders of mineral metabolism: primary/secondary hyperparathyroidism, osteomalacia (including that associated with a diagnosis of hypophosphatasia), vitamin D deficiency
Current pregnancy or lactation
Current active eating disorder, hypothalamic or exercise induced amenorrhea. Patients with past history of these disorders, resolved > 1 year ago, are eligible to participate. The Eating Aptitude Test -Questionnaire is given to identify women with subclinical eating disorders
Current malignancy
Endocrinopathy: new onset untreated hyperthyroidism/hypothyroidism, Cushing's syndrome, prolactinoma
Renal insufficiency (eGFR below 60 ml/min)
Liver disease (AST, ALT, bilirubin, total alkaline phosphatase activity above upper normal limit)
Intestinal malabsorption disorders including but not limited to pancreatic insufficiency, active Crohn Disease or untreated celiac disease.
History/current GCs, anticonvulsants, anticoagulants, methotrexate, GnRH agonists to suppress menstruation
Oral glucocorticoid dose equivalent >5 mg prednisone for >3 months.
Current use of specific anticonvulsants (carbamazepine, phenytoin, phenobarbital), methotrexate, GnRH agonists to suppress menstruation. Subjects who completed treatment with these medications > 1 year ago are eligible to participate
Current GCs (oral GC equivalent to 5mg prednisone or more). Subjects who completed treatment with these medications for ≤ 3 months, > 1 year ago are eligible to participate.
Current anticoagulant use; past use of warfarin (Coumadin) or low molecular weight heparin is not an exclusion, although known thrombotic disease is an exclusion
Depo Provera (depot medroxyprogesterone acetate) unless taken after age 20, more than 5 years ago
Drugs for osteoporosis (raloxifene, bisphosphonates, denosumab, calcitonin, TPTD/abaloparatide): Subjects who discontinue these medications will be eligible:
Subjects who have received ≤ 12 months of teriparatide or abaloparatide will be eligible 6 months after the last dose.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
31 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Mafo Kamanda-Kosseh; Mariana Bucovsky, MHA
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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