| Literature DB >> 27313945 |
Claire MacNabb1, D Patton1, J S Hayes1.
Abstract
It is estimated that over 200 million adults worldwide have osteoporosis, a disease that has increasing socioeconomic impact reflected by unsustainable costs associated with disability, fracture management, hospital stays, and treatment. Existing therapeutic treatments for osteoporosis are associated with a variety of issues relating to use, clinical predictability, and health risks. Consequently, additional novel therapeutic targets are increasingly sought. A promising therapeutic candidate is sclerostin, a Wnt pathway antagonist and, as such, a negative regulator of bone formation. Sclerostin antibody treatment has demonstrated efficacy and superiority compared to other anabolic treatments for increasing bone formation in both preclinical and clinical settings. Accordingly, it has been suggested that sclerostin antibody treatment is set to achieve market approval by 2017 and aggressively compete as the gold standard for osteoporotic treatment by 2021. In anticipation of phase III trial results which may potentially signify a significant step in achieving market approval here, we review the preclinical and clinical emergence of sclerostin antibody therapies for both osteoporosis and alternative applications. Potential clinical challenges are also explored as well as ongoing developments that may impact on the eventual clinical application of sclerostin antibodies as an effective treatment of osteoporosis.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27313945 PMCID: PMC4899597 DOI: 10.1155/2016/6217286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Osteoporos ISSN: 2042-0064
Figure 1(a) Canonical Wnt signalling involves binding of Wnt to LRP5/6 and its coreceptor Frizzled resulting in the phosphorylation of LRP5/6 thus permitting Axin to bind to the receptor complex. Formation of this complex leads to inhibition of GSK3β which prevents degradation of β-catenin. Accumulation of cytosolic β-catenin leads to nuclear translocation where it activates target gene promoters which result in increased bone mass. (b) Sclerostin inhibition of the Wnt-canonical pathway in osteogenesis. Sclerostin binding to LRP receptor 5/6 prevents Wnt binding and formation of the Frizzled-LRP complex and thus Axin remains unphosphorylated. Downstream effects include activation of GSK3β resulting in phosphorylation of cytosolic β-catenin, thus targeting it for degradation. In the absence of β-catenin accumulation and subsequent nuclear translocation, osteogenesis is prevented.
Figure 2The first in vivo study to test anti-sclerostin antibodies for increasing bone mass involved a rodent model of postmenopausal osteoporosis. Ovariectomised (OVX) rats were treated with 25 mg/kg of sclerostin antibody twice weekly for 5 weeks while sham-operated controls (Sham) were treated with PBS. Treatment with sclerostin antibody reportedly restored trabecular bone volume and bone mineral density (BMD) to comparable levels observed in sham-operated animals. Trabecular volumetric BMD = Tb. vBMD; median trabecular bone volume = Tb. BV/TV. p < 0.001 versus OVX + vehicle. Reproduced with permission from Li et al. [50].
Chronological listing of clinical trials of sclerostin neutralising antibodies.
| Clinical trial identifier | Phase | Study name | Number of participants and population | Treatment intervention | Primary endpoint | Study completion date (actual/estimate) |
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| I | A First-in-Human Study Evaluating AMG 785 (Romosozumab) in Healthy Men and Postmenopausal Women | 74 | 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 | Number of subjects (%) experiencing clinically significant changes in vital signs, physical exam, laboratory tests, and ECGs; developing anti-AMG 785 antibodies; reporting treatment-emergent adverse events up to 85 days after drug administration | August 2008 |
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| I | A Multiple-Dose Study to Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of AMG 785 | 48 | 1 mg/kg SC every 2 weeks × 6 doses; romosozumab or placebo | Number of subjects (%) with clinically significant changes in vital signs, physical exam, laboratory tests, and ECGs; developing anti-AMG 785 antibodies; reporting treatment-emergent adverse events up to 169 days after initial drug administration | July 2009 |
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| I | A First-in-Human Study Evaluating AMG 167 in Healthy Men and Postmenopausal Women | 69 | Postmenopausal women: one dose AMG 167 or placebo 21 mg, 70, 210, 350, or 700 mg SC or 70 mg or 350 mg IV | Number of subjects (%) experiencing clinically significant changes in safety laboratory tests, physical examinations, vital signs, or ECGs; developing anti-AMG 167 antibodies; reporting treatment-emergent adverse events up to 85 days after drug administration | November 2009 |
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| I | A Multiple-Dose Study of LY2541546 (Eli Lilly) in Healthy Postmenopausal Women | 59 | 180 mg LY2541546 SC Q4W for 8 weeks or placebo at weeks 2 and 6 | Number of subjects with 1+ SAE up to 141 days after drug administration | March 2010 |
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| I | A Study of LY2541546 in Healthy Postmenopausal Women | 60 | Single dose of 7.5 mg; 25 mg; 75 mg; 225 mg; 750 mg LY2541546 IV; single dose of 150 mg LY2541546 SC; single dose of placebo administered IV or SC; single dose of 225 mg or 750 mg LY2541546 IV, OL | Number of subjects with 1+ SAE up to 85 days after drug administration | June 2010 |
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| I | A Single-Dose Study Evaluating AMG 785 in Healthy Postmenopausal Japanese Women | 31 | Postmenopausal Japanese women: 1 mg/kg, 3 mg/kg, or 5 mg/kg AMG 785 or placebo | Number of subjects (%) experiencing clinically significant changes in vital signs, physical exam, laboratory tests, and ECGs; developing anti-AMG 785 antibodies; reporting treatment-emergent adverse events up to 85 days after drug administration | November 2010 |
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| I | A Study to Evaluate the Effect of AMG 785 on Bone Quality of the Forearm in Postmenopausal Women With Low Bone Mass | 24 | 3 mg/kg AMG 785 or placebo SC of every 4 weeks for 3 months | Polar cross-sectional moment of inertia at the distal radius assessed by pQCT up to 169 days after drug administration | December 2010 |
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| II | Phase 2 Study of AMG 785 in Postmenopausal Women With Low Bone Mineral Density | 419 | (1) Romosozumab 70 mg, 140 mg, or 210 mg or placebo QM | % change from baseline at month 12 in bone mineral density at the lumbar spine for the individual AMG 785 groups and pooled placebo arms | April 2016 |
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| I | Ascending-Multiple-Dose Study Evaluating AMG 167 in Healthy Men and Postmenopausal Women With Low Bone Mineral Density | 74 | Postmenopausal women: AMG 167 or placebo in one of 3 fixed doses SC | Number of subjects (%) experiencing clinically significant changes in vital signs, physical exam, laboratory tests, and ECGs; developing anti-AMG 785 antibodies; reporting treatment-emergent adverse events up to 336 days after drug administration | February 2012 |
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| II | A Study of AMG 785 in Tibial Diaphyseal Fractures Status Post Intramedullary Nailing | 402 | Two, three, or four doses of AMG 785 70 mg, 140 mg, or 210 mg or four doses of placebo | Time to radiographic healing for AMG 785 versus placebo groups over 24 weeks | September 2012 |
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| II | Dose Escalation Study to Evaluate the Safety and Tolerability of Multiple Infusions of BPS804 (Novartis) in Adults with Hypophosphatasia | 9 | Dose escalation (doses not specified) | Number (%) of subjects experiencing adverse events or SAE; change from baseline in primary serological bone biomarkers up to 141 days after drug administration | September 2012 |
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| II | Safety, Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of BPS804 in Osteogenesis Imperfecta | 10 | Dose escalation (doses not specified) versus placebo | Safety and tolerability; pharmacodynamic effect by means of biomarkers (days 1 and 43); change in | December 2012 |
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| II | Study to Assess Fracture Healing with Sclerostin Antibody | 332 | Four doses of 70 mg, 140 mg, or 210 mg AMG 785 or placebo SC over 52 weeks | Functional healing as measured by the mean value for the timed-up-and-go test over weeks 6 to 20 | January 2013 |
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| I | Transition from Alendronate to AMG 785 | 60 | Three doses of AMG 785 dose 1 or dose 2 (not specified) | Change in lumbar spine BMD from baseline at day 85 | January 2013 |
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| II | A Study of LY2541546 in Women with Low Bone Mineral Density | 153 | LY2541546 SC every 4 weeks with placebo given every alternate 2 weeks (patient will receive an injection every 2 weeks) for 52 weeks | Change from baseline to 52-week endpoint in lumbar spine BMD | February 2013 |
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| II | Safety and Efficacy of Multiple-Dosing Regimens of BPS804 in Postmenopausal Women with Low Bone Mineral Density | 44 | BPS804 or placebo at dosing frequency 1, 2, or 3 (not specified) | Change from baseline in BMD in lumbar spine to month 9 in bone mineral density at the lumbar spine for the individual BPS804 groups and pooled placebo arms after 9 months; number (%) of subjects experiencing adverse events or SAE | October 2013 |
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| I | Study of Romosozumab (AMG 785) Administered to Healthy Subjects and Subjects with Stage 4 Renal Impairment or Stage 5 Renal Impairment Requiring Haemodialysis | 24 | Single-dose romosozumab SC (not specified) | Incidence of treatment-emergent adverse events; results of safety laboratory tests, vital sign measurements or ECG measurements; development of anti-romosozumab antibodies | April 2014 |
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| I | A Study of Blosozumab (LY2541546) in Postmenopausal Female Participants | 40 | Blosozumab SC QW SC for 6 weeks | Pharmacokinetics (max concentration of blosozumab; area under the concentration curve) | July 2014 |
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| III | A Randomized Phase 3 Study to Evaluate 2 Different Formulations of Romosozumab in Postmenopausal Women With Osteoporosis | 294 | Romosozumab formulation A or B or placebo (dose, frequency not specified) | % change from baseline in DXA BMD in the lumbar spine 6 months after drug administration | December 2014 |
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| II | Study with AMG 785 to Treat Japanese Women with Postmenopausal Osteoporosis | 252 | Romosozumab (three treatment arms, doses unknown) or placebo SC for 12 months (frequency not specified) | % changes from baseline in lumbar spine BMD at 12 months | January 2015 |
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| III | An Open-Label Study to Evaluate the Effect of Treatment with AMG 785 or Teriparatide in Postmenopausal Women (STRUCTURE) | 436 | Romosozumab or teriparatide SC for 12 months | % change from baseline in DXA BMD at the total hip through month 12 | January 2015 |
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| III | A Double-blind Study to Compare the Safety and Efficacy of Romosozumab (AMG 785) versus Placebo in Men with Osteoporosis (BRIDGE) | 245 | Monthly SC injection of romosozumab or placebo for 12 months | % change from baseline in DXA BMD in lumbar spine at month 12 | December 2016 |
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| III | Registrational Study with AMG 785 to Treat Postmenopausal Osteoporosis (FRAME) | 7180 | Romosozumab SC or placebo for 12 months, followed by SC OL denosumab for 24 months | Incidence of vertebral fracture at 12 and 24 months | February 2017 |
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| III | Study to Determine the Efficacy and Safety of Romosozumab in the Treatment of Postmenopausal Women with Osteoporosis | 4094 | Romosozumab SC injections and placebo alendronate (oral) for 12 months followed by OL alendronate (oral) for at least another 12 months (until end of study) | Incidence of clinical fracture or new vertebral fracture at 24 months after drug administration | May 2017 |
BMD: bone mineral density; ECG: electrocardiogram; IV: intravenously; OL: open label; SAE: serious adverse events; SC: subcutaneously; QW: weekly; Q2W: once every 2 weeks; Q4W: once every four weeks; QD: daily; QM: every month.
Figure 3Change in serum concentrations of P1NP after multiple doses of anti-sclerostin antibodies in cynomolgus monkeys (a) and humans (b). (a) After 30 mg/kg, subcutaneous dose of romosozumab P1NP levels (a marker of bone formation) increases in cynomolgus monkeys. Subsequently, P1NP levels decline before increasing subsequent to the second dose of romosozumab on day 29 (day of administration delineated by “X”). (b) This sharply contrasts with median levels of P1NP observed in human subjects after monthly doses of 210 mg (total monthly dose) of blosozumab over a 12-month period. Here a sharp increase in P1NP is observed after initial administration which peaks after the second subcutaneous injection of romosozumab at 1 month. Despite subsequent monthly doses, P1NP levels continue to decline and were observed to fall below baseline levels after 7 months, where levels remained until 12 months (demarcated the end of the study) [images adapted from [52] (a) and [55] (b)].