| Literature DB >> 21052538 |
Vanadin Seifert-Klauss1, Jerilynn C Prior.
Abstract
Estradiol (E(2)) and progesterone (P(4)) collaborate within bone remodelling on resorption (E(2)) and formation (P(4)). We integrate evidence that P(4) may prevent and, with antiresorptives, treat women's osteoporosis. P(4) stimulates osteoblast differentiation in vitro. Menarche (E(2)) and onset of ovulation (P(4)) both contribute to peak BMD. Meta-analysis of 5 studies confirms that regularly cycling premenopausal women lose bone mineral density (BMD) related to subclinical ovulatory disturbances (SODs). Cyclic progestin prevents bone loss in healthy premenopausal women with amenorrhea or SOD. BMD loss is more rapid in perimenopause than postmenopause-decreased bone formation due to P(4) deficiency contributes. In 4 placebo-controlled RCTs, BMD loss is not prevented by P(4) in postmenopausal women with increased bone turnover. However, 5 studies of E(2)-MPA co-therapy show greater BMD increases versus E(2) alone. P(4) fracture data are lacking. P(4) prevents bone loss in pre- and possibly perimenopausal women; progesterone co-therapy with antiresorptives may increase bone formation and BMD.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21052538 PMCID: PMC2968416 DOI: 10.4061/2010/845180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Osteoporos ISSN: 2042-0064
Figure 1This photomicrograph (at 400 power magnification) shows human osteoblasts in culture after 28 days stained to show Alkaline Phosphatase production as dark blue. (a) Estradiol at a physiological concentration. (b) Estradiol alone for 7 days combined with Progesterone for 21 days. Note the lack of alkaline phosphatase staining in (a) exposed to estrogen alone, and the marked ALP staining indicating osteoblast differentiation/maturation induced by the addition of progesterone, (b) This figure is reprinted from [20] with permission from authors (Schmidmayr M and Seifert-Klauss V). Publisher permission provided.
Figure 2This diagram illustrates changes in Total Body (black circle) and Spine (black square) Bone Mineral Content (BMC) adjusted for body size in a population-based cohort of adolescents (mean 11.8 years old) by Tanner Stages on the X-axis. It is drawn from data in Table 3 [28]. Endocrine Society permission provided.
Figure 3This graph shows the multivariable regression for the mean and the 95% confidence interval of the change in total body bone mineral density (BMD) over 3 years in relationship to time since menarche in 38 peripubertal girls studied prospectively [30]. The vertical line shows the earliest, in a subset of 13 girls who provided menstrual calendar data and salivary progesterone levels, that ovulation could be diagnosed [34]. Reprinted with permission of the authors. Society for Bone and Mineral Research permission provided.
Prospective studies of spinal Bone Mineral Density (BMD) change by ovulatory menstrual cycles compared with ovulatory disturbances (anovulation and short luteal phases within normal length cycles). BMD is by Quantitative Computed Tomography (*) or Dual Energy X-ray Absorptiometry (+). All data are shown as mean ± SD.
| Manuscript | Number women | Duration (years) | Age ± SD (range) | Body Mass Index | # Cycles/year | Cycle length (days) | % Bone change/year-spine | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal∙ | Ovulatory disturbances | |||||||
| Prior 1990 [ | 66 | 1 | 33.7 ± 7.1 (20–42) | 22.0 (18–24.9) | 10 (6 to 13 cycles) | 28.2 ± 2.6 | (*) +0.2 | (*) –3.3 |
| Prior 1996 [ | 27 | 4 | 35.9 ± 4.9 | 21.7 (18–24.9) | 1.5 (3–46 cycles) | 27.8 ± 2.4 | (*) | (*) |
| Waller 1996 [ | 53 | 1.5 | 33.4 ± 4.3 |
| 2.7 |
| (+) −0.05 | (+) +0.55 |
| Waugh 2007 [ | 189 | 2 | 32.4 ± 4.6 (21–40) | 24.3 (range not given) | 5 | 28.9 ± 3.9 | (+) +1.6 | (+) −0.4 |
| Bedford 2010 [ | 123 | 2 | 22.1 ± 3.3 (19–35) | 21.8 ± 2.5 | 6.8 ± 7.0 | 30.8 ± 4.1 | (+) +1.9 | (+) +0.7 |
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| Totals (Mean) | 458 | 2.1 | 31.4 | 22.5 | 6.6 | 28.9 | +0.53 | −0.68 |
°Based on a median split of % all cycles with ovulatory disturbances. “Normal” = 0%–33% of all cycles with ovulatory disturbances and “Ovulatory Disturbances” = 34%–100% of cycles with ovulatory disturbances.
∙“Normal" means normal menstrual cycle length with ovulation and a normal luteal phase length
# Numbers of cycles/year in which ovulation and ovulatory disturbances as well as cycle length were documented.
means not recorded.
Cross-sectional studies on perimenopausal bone metabolism and bone mineral density.
| Author | Title | Design | Methods | Relevant findings | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ebeling et al. 1996 [ |
| 281 women, 45–57 years. | DXA | Postmenopausal group: BMD ↓ ↓. | Perimenopause: increased bone resorption rate and decreased bone density. |
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| Khosla et al. 2005 [ |
| 235 untreated women | QCT | Postmenopausal group: significant correlation of low bioavailable E2 and BMD (trabecular and cortical). | Trabecular bone reacts faster to lowering E2. |
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| Kushida et al. 1995 [ |
| 95 premenopausal women, 30–53 years. | No BMD measurement | Postmenopausal group: AP, OC, PICP, PYD, DPD significantly higher than in premenopausal group. | Markers in postmenopause higher than in premenopause. In women with osteoporosis resorption markers are higher than formation markers. |
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| Löfman et al. 2005 [ |
| Cross sectional study | 2x DXA | Baseline values of markers correlated negatively with baseline BMD. | Bone markers and current BMD could give information about coming loss of BMD. |
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| Melton et al. 1997 [ |
| 351 women, 20–80 years. | DXA | Premenopausal group: OC, NTX negatively correlated with BMD. | Combination of markers with BMD measurement is sensible for prediction of individual fracture risk. |
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| Ravn et al. 1996 [ |
| 979 women, 30–75 years. | DXA | Premenopausal <50 years: markers stable. | Bone metabolism is accelerated in perimenopause and early postmenopause. |
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| Sowers et al. 2003 [ |
| 2336 women, multiethnic, 42–52 years. | DXA | Perimenopausal group: FSH higher and BMD lower than premenopausal group. | Loss of BMD starts before menopause. |
Figure 4Intra-cycle follicular-luteal phase change in two different bone turnover markers by the serum progesterone level used as a threshold for ovulation. (a) shows the bone formation marker bone-specific alkaline phosphatase (BAP) in serum, (b) depicts changes in the bone resorption marker Pyridinoline (PYD) extracted with HPLC from urine and normalized to creatinine reprinted from [77]. Permissions provided.
Figure 5The 2-year-change of trabecular lumbar spine bone mineral density documented by Quantitative Computed Tomography (QCT) is shown by rate of ovulatory cycles in 28 women with complete ovulation data out of the 44 women studied prospectively in the ongoing PEKNO-Trial. Assessed by a commercially available ovulation monitor device, ovulation-likelihood was verified by luteal phase serum sampling. The graph illustrates the significant linear relationship (r = 0.7; P < .05) observed between the percentage of ovulatory cycles and BMD loss in pre- and perimenopausal women. This figure is from a presentation on the interim analysis by T. Wimmer and V. Seifert-Klauss to the Congress of the German Menopause Society (Deutsche Menopausen Gesellschaft) in Hamburg, November 6th 2009 (unpublished). The authors provide permission.
Double-blind randomized controlled trials of percentage spine Bone Mineral Density (BMD) change per year in postmenopausal women treated with Progesterone/Medroxyprogesterone (MPA) compared with placebo.
| Author/year and reference | Total number | Age | Bone site | Years | Drug and dose | Schedule | Number | % BMD Change (Active) | Number | % BMD Change (Placebo) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gallagher 1991 [ | 81 | 51.7 ± 4.4 | DPA* | 2 | MPA 20 mg | 23/28 days | 20 | Spine −2.5 | 20 | Spine −3.8 |
| Radius | 20 | Radius 0.0 | 18 | Radius −2.4 | ||||||
| Prior 1997 [ | 33 | 45 ± 5 | QCT | 1 | MPA 10 mg | Daily | 18 | QCT −15 | NA∙ | NA |
| WB+ | WB −2.8 | NA | NA | |||||||
| FN++ | FN −5.2 | NA | NA | |||||||
| Leonetti 1999 [ | 102 | 52.5 | DXA | 1 | *P4 Cream 20 mg | Daily | 43 | Spine −1.4 | 47 | Spine −1.0 |
| T Hip | 43 | T Hip −2.5 | 47 | T Hip −1.0 | ||||||
| Liu 2005 [ | 132 | 52.5 | DXA | 2 | +OMP | 300 mg Daily | 15 | Spine −1.0 | 23 | Spine −1.0 |
| FN | 15 | FN −0.5 | 23 | FN −0.0 | ||||||
| MPA | 10 mg Daily | 16 | Spine −1.9 | 23 | Spine −1.0 | |||||
| 16 | FN −1.1 | 23 | FN −0.0 | |||||||
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| Mean % Change | OMP & P4 Cream | 58 | Spine −1.2 | 70 | Spine −1.0 | |||||
| MPA | 36 | Spine −2.2 | 43 | Spine −2.4 | ||||||
*P4: progesterone
+OMP: oral micronized progesterone
∙NA: not available—this trial was controlled by conjugated equine estrogen and without a placebo.
Comparison of randomized double-blind controlled trials of bone change in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis comparing combined estrogen [Conjugated Equine Estrogen (CEE) or Estradiol (E2)] plus progesterone or medroxyprogesterone (MPA) and documenting percentage (%) change per year in Bone Mineral Density.
| Author | Type | Number | Age ± SD | Bone sites | Years | Anti-resorptive mg/d | Progesterone/ | Number | Combined % bone change | Number | Anti-R* % bone change |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gallagher 1991 [ | RCT not blinded | 81 | 52 ± 4 | DPA | 2 | 0.3 CEE | MPA 10 mg | 16 | Spine +0.25 | 18 | Spine +1.0 |
| Radius | Radius +0.0 | Radius −0.05 | |||||||||
| PEPI 1996 [ | DB-RCT | 875 | 56 | DXA | 3 | CEE 0.625 | MPA 2.5 mg/d | 174 | Spine +1.6 | 175 | Spine +1.4 |
| Total Hip (TH) | 174 | TH +0.5 | 175 | TH +0.5 | |||||||
| Adachi 1997 [ | DB-RCT | 98 | 54 | DPA | 1 | CEE 0.625 | MPA 10 mg for 15 d/mo. | 33 | Spine +2.7 | 34 | Spine +1.9 |
| Lindsay 2002 [ | DB-RCT | 695 | 58 | L2−4 | 2 | CEE 0.625 | MPA 2.5 mg/d | 81 | Spine +1.7 | 84 | Spine +1.2 |
| Total Hip (TH) | TH +1.3 | TH +1.4 | |||||||||
| CEE 0.45 | MPA 2.5 mg/d | 87 | Spine +1.5 | 91 | Spine +1.1 | ||||||
| TH +1.1 | TH +1.0 | ||||||||||
| Liu 2005 [ | DB-RCT | 132 | 53 | DXA | 2 | E2 1 mg/d | MPA 10 mg/d | 20 | Spine +2.3 | 23 | Spine +1.3 |
| FN | OME# | FN +0.9 | FN +1.0 | ||||||||
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| 330 | Spine +1.7 | 425 | Spine +1.3 | |||||||
∙DPA: dual photon absorptiometry, SPA: single photon absorptiometry, DXA: dual energy X-ray absorptiometry.
*Anti-R: antiresorptive therapy, #OME: oral micronized estradiol.
Note that the two estrogen-dose arms of the Lindsay study were considered as two different studies in the mean spine bone change.