Literature DB >> 18976724

Damaging effects of chronic low-dose methotrexate usage on primary bone formation in young rats and potential protective effects of folinic acid supplementary treatment.

Chiaming Fan1, Johanna C Cool, Michaela A Scherer, Bruce K Foster, Tetyana Shandala, Heather Tapp, Cory J Xian.   

Abstract

Methotrexate (MTX) is a most commonly used anti-metabolite in cancer treatment and as an anti-rheumatic drug. While MTX chemotherapy at a high dose is known to cause bone growth defects in growing bones, effects of its chronic use at a low dose on growing skeleton remain less clear. Here, we examined effects on bone growth of long-term MTX chemotherapy at a low dose in young rats, and potential protective effects of supplementary treatment with antidote folinic acid (given ip at 1 mg/kg 6 h after MTX). After two cycles of 5 once-daily MTX injections (at 0.75 mg/kg, 5 days on/9 days off/5 days on), histological analysis showed that MTX at this dose caused significant reduction in heights of growth plate and primary spongiosa bone on day 22 compared to controls (P<0.05). In contrast, a similar dosing regimen but at a lower dose (0.4 mg/kg) caused only slight or no reduction in heights of both regions. However, after the induction phase at this 0.4 mg/kg dosing, continued use of MTX at a low dose (once weekly at 0.2 mg/kg) caused a reduction in primary spongiosa height and bone volume on weeks 9 and 14, which was associated with an increased osteoclast formation and their bone surface density as well as a decreased osteoblast bone surface density in the primary spongiosa. Folinic acid supplementation was shown able to prevent the MTX effects in the primary spongiosa. These results suggest that acute use of MTX can damage growth plate and primary bone at a high dose, but not at a low dose. However, long-term use of MTX at a low dose can reduce primary bone formation probably due to decreased osteoblastic function but increased osteoclastic formation and function, and supplementary treatment with folinic acid may be potentially useful in protecting bone growth during long-term low-dose MTX chemotherapy.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18976724     DOI: 10.1016/j.bone.2008.09.014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bone        ISSN: 1873-2763            Impact factor:   4.398


  27 in total

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4.  Deregulation of the CXCL12/CXCR4 axis in methotrexate chemotherapy-induced damage and recovery of the bone marrow microenvironment.

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5.  The influence of folic acid supplementation on maternal and fetal bone turnover.

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Review 6.  Distraction osteogenesis reconstruction of large segmental bone defects after primary tumor resection: pitfalls and benefits.

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Review 7.  Bone mineral density deficits and fractures in survivors of childhood cancer.

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Review 8.  Methotrexate osteopathy: five cases and systematic literature review.

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9.  Regulatory pathways associated with bone loss and bone marrow adiposity caused by aging, chemotherapy, glucocorticoid therapy and radiotherapy.

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Review 10.  Osteoporosis drug therapy strategies in the setting of disease-modifying agents for autoimmune disease.

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