| Literature DB >> 26944820 |
H Hoyer-Kuhn1, J Franklin, G Allo, M Kron, C Netzer, P Eysel, B Hero, E Schoenau, O Semler.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a rare hereditary disease leading to bone fragility. Denosumab as a RANK ligand antibody inhibiting osteoclast maturation has been approved for osteoporosis treatment in adults. Aim of this study was a 48-week, open-label, pilot study of the safety and efficacy of denosumab in 10 children with OI.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26944820 PMCID: PMC5089451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Musculoskelet Neuronal Interact ISSN: 1108-7161 Impact factor: 2.041
Figure 1A. Presents the individual absolute lumbar spine areal bone mineral density values (L2-L4) plotted against age at trial entry (baseline) and week 48. B. Age-adjusted Z-scores and their changes are shown individually and as mean for 10 patients between baseline and week 48.
Figure 2Presents individual courses of the lumbar spine areal bone mineral density Z-scores between last DXA evaluation before start of the trial, at start of the trial and end of the trial. The last available comparable Z-score before trial entry was retrospectively available in 8 out of 10 study participants (in the period of 10-13 months before trial entry).
Figure 3A/B. presents exemplarily the individual courses in ten patients of ionized serum calcium (Ca ionized) and urinary desoxypyridinoline/creatinine (DPD/Krea) levels after the first application of denosumab at trial week 0. Presented are all blood and spot urine controls from the day of application (day 0) to day 70 post first denosumab injection (one trial interval of 12 weeks). The next dosage was given at day 84 (not shown here). C-F. Mean levels +/- SD of the bone metabolism markers Osteocalcin (C), total serum calcium (D), parathyroid hormone (PTH), and serum N-Telopeptides (NTX) at the different visits (Screening, baseline, week 12, week 24, week 36, and week 48; whole trial intervals!) are demonstrated.
Changes of areal bone mineral density and spine morphometry between baseline and week 48 of the trial.
| Parameter | Number of patients | Baseline | Week 48 | Change baseline – week 48 [95% CI] | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| aBMD lumbar vertebrae L2-L4 (g/cm2) | 10 | 0.5070 ± 0.1868 | 0.6118 ± 0.2294 | + 0.10 [0.06-0.15] | < 0.001 |
| aBMD lumbar vertebrae L2-L4 Z-score | 10 | -2.230 ± 2.0281 | -1.270 ± 2.366 | + 0.96 [0.597-1.323] | < 0.001 |
| Morphometry Spine Anterior-posterior index (1-ah/ph)*100 | 8 | -16.18 ± 41.46 | -4.475 ± 14.67 | - | 0.30 |
| Morphometry Spine Concavity index (1-mh/ah)*100 | 8 | 5.436 ± 25.7 | 7.322 ± 23.96 | - | 0.92 |
| Morphometry score x-ray spine (mean score) [range] | 10 | 24.7 [1 – 105] | 23.2 [1 – 109] | +1.5 | 0.63 |
aBMD = areal bone mineral density, L2 – L4 = Lumbar vertebrae 2 - 4, SD = standard deviation; CI = confidence interval.
Changes of mobility and height between baseline, week 24 and week 48 of the trial.
| Parameter | Number of patients | Baseline | Week 24 | Week 48 | Change baseline – week 48 [95% CI] | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GMFM [%] | 9 | 77.58 ± 31.64 | 79.69± 31.33 | 80.3 ± 31.06 | 2.722 [-0.8253-6.27] | 0.16 |
| Walking 1 Min [m] | 7 | 86.57 ± 26.83 | 93.0 ± 15.28 | 97.57 ± 18.0 | 11 [-3.633-25.63] | 0.14 |
| Walking 6 Min [m] | 6 | 486.5 ± 166.5 | 530.2 ± 164.5 | 535.2 ± 159.8 | 48.7 [18.561-78.773] | 0.06 |
| Height Mean [cm] (SD) | 10 | 105.0 ± 20.2 | - | 108.9 ± 21.2 | 3.9 [2.98-4.82] | 0.002 |
| Height Mean [Z-Scores] (SD) | 10 | -4.64 ± 3.72 | - | -4.62 ± 3.58 | 0.024 [-0.3- 0.3483] | 0.70 |
GMFM = Gross motor function measurement, SD = standard deviation CI = confidence interval.
Figure 4A. shows the individual absolute differences of 9 study participants in the GMFM-88 assessments at baseline, week 24 and 48. 2 children started with a maximum of 100% in the GMFM-88 and maintained their mobility levels until week 48. Therefore no changes are detectable in these 2 children (marked by the asterisk) lying on the dotted line which marks the line of no difference. B. The individual percent changes of walking distance are presented between week 0, week 24 and week 48 in the 7 children who were able to walk at trial entry.
List of side effects possible attributed to the drug.
| Description of side effects | Common Toxicity Criteria grade | Relationship to denosumab | Frequency (n) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypocalcemia | 1 | certain | 1 |
| Arthralgia | 1 | possible | 7 |
| Arthralgia | 2 | possible | 3 |
| Aphthous lesion soft palate | 1 | possible | 1 |
| Muscle pain | 1 | possible | 3 |
| Pain left thoracic side between ribs | 1 | possible | 1 |
Baseline characteristics of the study cohort.
| Participants n | 10 |
| Male n (%) | 7 (70) |
| Age Mean [years] (range) | 7.0 (5.0 – 11.0) |
| Height Mean [cm] (range) | 105.0 (66.0 – 134.0) |
| Weight Mean [kg] (range) | 19.3 (7.8 – 27.3) |
| BMI Mean [kg/m2] (range) | 17.6 (13.1 – 33.0) |
| OI Type I/IV n (%) | 8 (80) |
| OI Type III n (%) | 2 (20) |
| Causative gene |
Abbreviations: BMI (body mass index); GMFM (gross motor function measurement); COL1A1, COL1A2 (Collagen genes: Collagen 1A1, Collagen 1A2).