| Literature DB >> 28502032 |
Marc G Vervloet1, Vincent M Brandenburg2.
Abstract
Renal osteodystrophy is a feature of chronic kidney disease (CKD), with increasing prevalence as CKD progresses. This bone disease is responsible for major morbidity, including fractures, and a deterioration in the quality of life and its sequelae. Circulating biomarkers of renal osteodystrophy typically indicate bone turnover, but not other features of bone, like bone volume, mineralization, quality or strength. Bone turnover can be considered to be primarily a reflection of bone cell activity, in particular that of osteoblasts and osteoclasts. Since current treatments for bone disease usually target cellular activity, biomarkers are considered to be able to contribute to the decision-making for treatment and its follow-up. In CKD, one has to consider the impact of a diminished clearance of biomarkers or their altered metabolism, both potentially limiting its clinical use. Here, several aspects of the most frequently used biomarkers of bone turnover are reviewed, with an emphasis on the specific situation represented by CKD. This review is based on the overview lecture at the symposium held in Amsterdam, September 23, 2016: "The Bone In CKD", organized by the CKD-MBD working group of ERA-EDTA.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Bone turnover; CKD-MBD; Chronic kidney disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28502032 PMCID: PMC5628199 DOI: 10.1007/s40620-017-0408-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nephrol ISSN: 1121-8428 Impact factor: 3.902
Fig. 1Complex relationship between biomarkers of bone turnover and clinical outcome. For several biomarkers, like PTH and alkaline phosphatase, the association with mortality and cardiovascular (CV) morbidity is reasonably well established. However, the association between these markers and bone histomorphometry is less clear. Importantly, no strong data clarify the relationship between bone histomorphometry and either future bone fracture or CV complications, mostly due to a paucity of data examining bone histology
Fig. 2Despite the different origin of osteoblasts on the right and osteoclasts on the left, their activity is highly coordinated and under cellular control orchestrated by osteocytes, hidden in mineralized bone and a highly complex system of paracrine action humoral factors, not shown in the diagram. (From [22]: approval pending)
Area under receiver operating curves of circulating bone biomarkers to distinguish high and low bone turnover from nonhigh and nonlow bone turnover, respectively, as assessed by BFR/BS [27] (approval pending)
| Blood sample marker | N | AUROC (95% CI) | Best cut off |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low vs non low | |||
| iPTH (pg/ml) | 280 vs 196 | 0.701 (0.653–0.750) | 103.8 |
| wPTH (pg/ml) | 260 vs 180 | 0.712 (0.662–0.761) | 48.0 |
| bALP (U/l) | 273 vs 190 | 0.757 (0.713–0.801) | 33.1 |
| P1NP (ng/ml) | 280 vs 1197 | 0.650 (0.599–0.701) | 498.9 |
| Combined iPTH + bALP | 272 vs 188 | 0.718 (0.670–0.767) | NA |
| Combined wPTH + bALP | 257 vs 174 | 0.743 (0.695–0.790) | NA |
| High vs non high | |||
| iPTH (pg/ml) | 81 vs 395 | 0.724 (0.663–0.786) | 323.0 |
| wPTH (pg/ml) | 75 vs 365 | 0.678 (0.611–0.746) | 61.4 |
| bALP (U/l) | 77 vs 386 | 0.711 (0.655–0.767) | 42.1 |
| P1NP (ng/ml) | 81 vs 396 | 0.743 (0.689–0.797) | 621.1 |
| Combined iPTH + bALP | 76 vs 384 | 0.718 (0.658–0.779) | NA |
| Combined wPTH + bALP | 72 vs 359 | 0.691 (0.628–0.725) | NA |
AUROC area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, bALP bone-specific alkaline phosphatase, BFR/BS bone formation rate/bone surface, CI confidence in-terval, iPTH intact parathyroid hormone, NA not available, P1NP amino-terminal propeptide of type 1 procollagen, wPTH whole parathyroid hormona
Fig. 3Components of PTH resistance in CKD. Secreted PTH from parathyroid cells may exist as a bio-active 1–84 fragment containing polypeptides, but also as variable amounts of PTH fragments with variable biological effects, including an antagonizing impact. In addition, after secreting normal PTH, in CKD the hormone may undergo abnormal posttranslational modification. Finally, target tissue may be hypo-responsive to normal PTH in CKD