| Literature DB >> 26082665 |
Arti D Shah1, Dolores Shoback2, E Michael Lewiecki3.
Abstract
Osteoporosis and osteoporosis-related fractures are growing problems with the aging population and are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. At this time, other than parathyroid hormone analogs, all therapies for osteoporosis are antiresorptive. Therefore, researchers have focused efforts on development of more anabolic therapies. Understanding of the Wnt signaling pathway, which is critical for skeletal development, and the role of sclerostin in inhibition of Wnt signaling has led to the discovery of a novel therapeutic approach in the treatment of osteoporosis - sclerostin inhibition. In this review, we discuss the biology of Wnt signaling and sclerostin inhibition. We then discuss human disorders of decreased sclerostin function and animal models of sclerostin inhibition. Both have served to elucidate the effects of decreased sclerostin levels and function - increased bone mass and strength and fewer fractures. In addition, we review data from Phase I and II studies of the two humanized sclerostin monoclonal antibodies, romosozumab and blosozumab, both of which have had positive effects on bone mineral density. We conclude with a discussion of the ongoing Phase III studies of romosozumab. The available data support the potential for neutralizing sclerostin monoclonal antibodies to serve as anabolic agents in the treatment of osteoporosis.Entities:
Keywords: Wnt signaling; anabolic therapies; osteoporosis; romosozumab; sclerostin
Year: 2015 PMID: 26082665 PMCID: PMC4459616 DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S73244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Womens Health ISSN: 1179-1411
Figure 1Wnt signaling pathways and the biology of sclerostin.
Notes: (A) Canonical Wnt signaling: in the absence of sclerostin, Wnt binds to LRP 5/6 and its co-receptor, frizzled. This results in phosphorylation of the cytoplasmic tail of LRP 5/6, which allows axin to bind the receptor complex Axin binding leads to inhibition of GSK-3β, which normally functions to target β-catenin for degradation. Therefore, cytoplasmic levels of β-catenin increase and are translocated to the nucleus, where they bind to DNA binding proteins and activate target gene promoters. This results in osteoblast differentiation, proliferation and survival and hence, increased bone formation. (B and C) Loss-of-function of LRP5 and Wnt prevent canonical Wnt signaling: Loss-of-function of LRP5 and Wnt prevent formation of the active Wnt-LRP 5/6-frizzled complex and prevent Wnt signaling. The cytoplasmic tail of LRP 5/6 remains unphosphorylated. Therefore, axin does not bind the receptor complex. GSK-3β activity is uninhibited and therefore leads to phosphorylation of β-catenin, targeting it for degradation. Cytoplasmic levels of β-catenin decrease. Therefore, there is less translocation of the protein to the nucleus. Target gene promoters of the Wnt signaling pathway are not activated. This results in decreased bone formation and increased bone resorption and hence, skeletal fragility and fractures. (D) Inhibition of canonical Wnt signaling by sclerostin: sclerostin is secreted by osteocytes. It binds to LRP 5/6, which prevents Wnt from binding to LRP 5/6 and its co-receptor, frizzled. Therefore, Wnt signaling is inhibited. Through the mechanisms described above (B and C), this results in decreased bone formation and increased bone resorption.
Figure 2Clinical effects of sclerosteosis and van Buchem disease.
Notes: (A) Sclerosteosis: facial features of a patient with sclerosteosis including a high forehead and large protruding chin. Reprinted from: The American Journal of Human Genetics, 64(6), Balemans W, van Den ende J, Freire Paes-Alves A, et al. Localization of the gene for sclerosteosis to the van Buchem disease-gene region on chromosome 17q12-q21. 1661–1669, Copyright © 1999; with permission from Elsevier.66 (B) van Buchem disease: X-rays show the generalized sclerosis seen in van Buchem patients. The picture to the left is a lateral view of the elbow showing diffuse diaphyseal sclerosis with a thickened cortex. The picture in the center and to the right are anteroposterior and lateral views of the skull which show extensive sclerosis of the calvarium and the skull base, enlargement of the mandible, and obliteration of the paranasal and mastoid air spaces. Reprinted from The American Journal of Human Genetics. 62(2). van Hul W, Balemans W, van Hul E, et al. van Buchem disease (hyperostosis corticalis generalisata) maps to chromosome 17q12-q21. 391–399. Copyright © 1998; with permission from Elsevier.28
Figure 3The effect of sclerostin inhibition on Wnt signaling.
Notes: Sclerostin is secreted by the osteocyte. Romosozumab, a humanized MAb against sclerostin, binds circulating sclerostin. This prevents binding of sclerostin to LRP 5/6. Therefore, Wnt is able to bind LRP 5/6 and its co-receptor, frizzled. This activates the Wnt signaling pathway, which eventually leads to osteoblast differentiation, proliferation and survival and, hence, increased bone formation.
Abbreviation: MAb, monoclonal antibody.
Summary of Phase I and II studies of romosozumab
| Clinical trial number | Study name | Number of participants | Study population | Treatment arms | Primary endpoint | Completion date (actual or expected) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01059435 | A first in-human study evaluating AMG 785 in healthy men and postmenopausal women | 74 | Healthy males and postmenopausal females, ages 45–59 years | Postmenopausal women: one dose of romosozumab: 0.1, 0.3, 1, 3, 5 or 10 mg/kg SC; or 1 or 5 mg/kg IV or placebo SC or IV Men: one dose of romosozumab: 1 or 5 mg/kg SC or IV or placebo SC or IV | Number of subjects who experience clinically significant changes in vital signs, physical exam, laboratory tests, and ECGs; develop anti-AMG 785 antibodies; report treatment-emergent adverse events up to 85 days after drug administration | August 2008 |
| NCT01825785 | A multiple dose study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of AMG 785 | 48 | Healthy males and postmenopausal females with low BMD (not osteoporosis), ages 45–80 years | Romosozumab or placebo 1 mg/kg SC every 2 weeks ×6 doses; Romosozumab or placebo 3 mg/kg every 4 weeks ×3 doses; Romosozumab or placebo 2 mg/kg every 2 weeks ×6 doses; Romosozumab or placebo 2 mg/kg every 4 weeks ×3 doses | Number (percentage) of subjects who experience clinically significant changes in vital signs, physical exam, laboratory tests, and ECGs; develop anti-AMG 785 antibodies; report treatment-emergent adverse events up to 169 days after initial drug administration | July 2009 |
| NCT01101061 | A single-dose study evaluating AMG 785 in healthy postmenopausal Japanese women | 31 | Postmenopausal Japanese women, ages 45–70 years | Single-dose of romosozumab 1 mg/kg, 3 mg/kg or 5 mg/kg or single dose of placebo | Number (percentage) of subjects who experience clinically significant changes in vital signs, physical exam, laboratory tests, and ECGs; develop anti-AMG 785 antibodies; report treatment-emergent adverse events up to 85 days after drug administration | November 2010 |
| NCT00950950 | A study to evaluate the effect of AMG 785 on bone quality of the forearm in postmenopausal women with low bone mass | 24 | Postmenopausal women with low BMD (not osteoporosis), ages 55–80 years | Romosozumab or placebo 3 mg/kg SC every 4 weeks for 3 months | Polar cross-sectional moment of inertia at the distal radius assessed by pQCT at screening and on days 29, 57, 85, 127, and 169 | December 2010 |
| NCT00907296 | Study of AMG 785 in tibial diaphyseal fractures status post intramedullary nailing | 402 | Skeletally mature adults with a unilateral closed or Gustilo type I or II open tibial fracture and fracture fixation with intramedullary nailing, ages 18–85 years | Two, three or four doses of romosozumab 70 mg, romosozumab 140 mg, or romosozumab 210 mg or four doses of placebo | Time to radiographic healing for the romosozumab versus placebo groups, followed for 24 weeks | September 2012 |
| NCT01588509 | Transition from Alendronate to AMG 785 | 60 | Postmenopausal women with low BMD (T-score ≤−2.0 and ≥−4.0) taking alendronate for ≥ 1 year, ages 55–85 years | Three doses of romosozumab dose one or dose two | Change from baseline in lumbar spine BMD at day 85 | January 2013 |
| NCT01081678 | Study to assess fracture healing with sclerostin antibod | 332 | Males and females with low energy intertrochanteric or femoral neck fracture with internal fixation of fracture with screw or nail | Four doses of romosozumab 70 mg, 140 mg or 210 mg or four doses of placebo | Functional healing measured by mean value for the timed-up-and-go test over weeks 6 to 20 for the romosozumab vs placebo groups | January 2013 |
| NCT01833754 | Study of romosozumab (AMG 785) administered to healthy subjects and subjects with stage 4 renal impairment or stage 5 renal impairment requiring hemodialysis | 24 | Healthy subjects with eGFR ≥80, subjects with stage 4 renal impairment and subjects on dialysis | Single dose of romosozumab | Incidence of adverse events, results of safety monitoring (labs, vital signs, ECG), incidence of anti-romosozumab antibodies at 85 days | April 2014 |
| NCT01992159 | Study with AMG 785 to treat Japanese women with postmenopausal osteoporosis | 252 | Postmenopausal Japanese women with osteoporosis, ages 55–85 years | Romosozumab (three treatment arms, doses unknown) or placebo SC for 12 months (frequency unknown) | Changes from baseline in lumbar spine BMD at 12 months | January 2015 |
| NCT00896532 | Phase II study of AMG 785 in postmenopausal women with low bone mineral density | 419 | Postmenopausal women with low BMD (T-score between −2.0 and −3.5), ages 55–85 years | a) Romosozumab 70 mg, 140 mg, or 210 mg or placebo every month | Percentage change from baseline at month 12 in BMD at the lumbar spine for the individual romosozumab groups and pooled placebo arms | April 2016 |
Abbreviations: BMD, bone mineral density; SC, subcutaneously; IV, intravenously; ECG, electrocardiogram; pQCT, peripheral quantitative computed tomography; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate.
Summary of Phase III studies of romosozumab in osteoporosis*
| Clinical trial number | Study name | Number of participants | Study population | Treatment arms | Primary endpoint | Expected completion date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 01575834 | Registrational study with AMG 785 to treat postmenopausal osteoporosis (FRAME) | 7,180 | Women with postmenopausal osteoporosis, ages 55–90 years | Romosozumab SC (dose unknown) or placebo SC for 12 months followed by open-label denosumab for 24 months | Incidence of vertebral fracture at 12 months and 24 months | December 2016 |
| 01631214 | Study to determine the efficacy and safety of romosozumab in the treatment of postmenopausal women with osteoporosis | 4,000 | Women with postmenopausal osteoporosis with high risk of fracture (defined as a T-score at the hip of ≤−2.5 and a vertebral fracture or T-score at the hip of ≤−2.0 and a recent hip fracture or two vertebral fractures), ages 55–90 years | a) Romosozumab SC (dose unknown) and placebo alendronate for 12 months | Incidence of clinical fracture and new vertebral fracture over 24 months | March 2017 |
| 01796301 | An open-label study to evaluate the effect of treatment with AMG 785 or teriparatide in postmenopausal women (STRUCTURE) | 436 | Postmenopausal women with osteoporosis previously treated with a bisphosphonate for at least 3 years, ages 60–90 years | Romosozumab SC (dose unknown) or teriparatide SC for 12 months | Percentage change from baseline in BMD at the total hip at month 12 | June 2015 |
| 02016716 | A randomized Phase III study to evaluate two different formulations of romosozumab in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis | 294 | Postmenopausal women with osteoporosis at high risk of fractures (defined as T-score between −2.5 and −3.5 at the lumbar spine, total hip or femoral neck and a history of fragility fracture or at least two other risk factors), ages 55–90 years | Romosozumab formulation A romosozumab formulation B, placebo formulation A, or placebo formulation B (doses unknown) | Percentage change from baseline in BMD at the lumbar spine at 6 months | December 2014 |
| 02186171 | A double-blind study to compare the safety and efficacy of romosozumab (AMG 785) versus placebo in men with osteoporosis (BRIDGE) | 225 | Men with osteoporosis, ages 55–90 years | Romosozumab SC (dose unknown) or placebo SC for 12 months | Percentage change from baseline in BMD at the lumbar spine at 12 months | December 2016 |
Note
Reference: ClinicalTrials.gov.
Abbreviations: BMD, bone mineral density; SC, subcutaneously.