| Literature DB >> 29713181 |
Tsuyoshi Ohishi1, Yukihiro Matsuyama2.
Abstract
Minodronate is a third-generation bisphosphonate that was developed and approved for clinical use in osteoporosis therapy in Japan. The mechanism of action for suppressing bone resorption is the inhibition of farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase, a key enzyme in the mevalonic acid metabolic pathway of osteoclasts, to induce apoptosis of the cells. Minodronate is the strongest inhibitor of bone resorption among the currently available oral bisphosphonates. Large randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical trials have revealed an increase in bone mineral density of both the lumbar spine and femoral neck over 3 years of daily minodronate therapy and risk reduction in vertebral fractures over 2 years of therapy. The increase in bone mass and the prevention of vertebral fractures are similar to those with alendronate or risedronate. The incidence of adverse events, especially gastrointestinal disturbance, is the same as or less than that with weekly or daily alendronate or risedronate. The unique mechanism of action of minodronate via the inhibition of the P2X(2/3) receptor compared with other bisphosphonates may be an advantage in reducing low back pain in patients with osteoporosis. The monthly regimen of minodronate, introduced in 2011, is expected to have better patient adherence and longer persistence. In experimental animal models, minodronate preserved, or even ameliorated, bone microarchitectures, including microcracks and perforation of the trabeculae in the short term. The lowest incidence of bisphosphonate-related osteonecrosis of the jaw among all bisphosphonates and the lack of atypical femoral fractures attributed to its use to date, however, are partly because only a smaller population used minodronate than those using other bisphosphonates. To date, minodronate is available only in Japan. Hip fracture risk reduction has not been verified yet. More clinical studies on minodronate and its use in osteoporosis treatment, with a large number of subjects, should be conducted to verify hip fracture risk reduction and long-term results.Entities:
Keywords: bisphosphonate; bone marker; bone mineral density; bone quality; clinical trial; farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase; fracture; long-term therapy; minodronate; osteoporosis; pain reduction; zoledronate
Year: 2018 PMID: 29713181 PMCID: PMC5909777 DOI: 10.2147/TCRM.S149236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Clin Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6336 Impact factor: 2.423
Clinical studies on minodronate in the treatment of osteoporosis with an observation period of ≥12 months
| Study | Drugs and patients | Age (years) | FU | BMD | Bone markers | AEs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hagino et al | D-MIN (n=134) | 63.9±6.6 | 12 M | MIN: LS, +5.9%; TH, +3.5% | uDPD and uNTX decreased in MIN more than in ALN | No difference between groups |
| Matsumoto et al | D-MIN (n=343) | 71.4±6.0 | 24 M | N/A | uNTX, uDPD, BAP, and OC decreased in MIN more than in PLC | Similar in both groups |
| Ito et al | D-MIN (n=103) | 63.9±6.4 | 12 M | Increased for FN, IT, and femoral shaft | N/A | N/A |
| Okazaki et al | D-MIN (n=234) | 51–89 years older women and men | 12 M | M-MIN (30 and 50 mg): noninferiority to D-MIN for LS and TH | No difference among groups for decrease of uNTX, uDPD, BAP, and BGP | Similar among groups |
| Hagino et al | D-MIN (n=64) | 71.1±0.4 (SE) | 36 M | LS: | uDPD, uNTX, BAP, and OC decreased by 30%–60% in MIN | Similar in both groups |
| Iwamoto et al | M-MIN (n=42) | 71.8±7.3 | 12 M | N/A | uNTX decreased | No serious AEs |
| Ebina et al | M-MIN (n=53) | 71.7±1.6 | 12 M | More increase in MIN + ELD than in other groups for LS, TH, and FN | TRACP-5b, P1NP, and ucOC decreased in MIN + ELD more than in the other groups | N/A |
| Ebina et al | a. W-ALN or W-RIS continue (n=88) | a. 64.9±0.9 (SE) | 12 M | More increase in the switch group than in the continue group for LS, TH, and FN | TRACP-5b, P1NP, and ucOC decreased in the switch group than in the continue group | N/A |
| Miyaoka et al | M-MIN (n=26) switch from TPTD | 64.9±11.8 | 12 M | Maintained LS | uNTX decreased | N/A |
| Nakatoh | M-MIN (n=41) | 81.6±5.0 | 12 M | LS and TH in MIN were increased | BAP and TRACT-5b decreased in all groups | N/A |
| Toda et al | M-MIN (n=25) switch from RLX | 66 (36–77) | 24 M | LS: +6.7% | BAP decreased by 30% at 6 M | N/A |
| Ohishi et al | M-MIN: | a. 73.3±8.8 | 27 M | Naïve: LS +9.1, FN +3.2, TH +3.1% | P1NP and uNTX decreased by 50%–70% in naïve | N/A |
Notes: Patients were all postmenopausal women if not otherwise indicated. Age is indicated by mean ± standard deviation if not otherwise indicated.
Abbreviations: AE, adverse event; BAP, bone-specific alkaline phosphatase; BGP, bone Gla protein; BMD, bone mineral density; D-ALN, 5 mg of daily alendronate; D-MIN, 1 mg of daily minodronate; ELD, eldecalcitol; FN, femoral neck; FU, follow-up period; IT, intertrochanter; LS, lumbar spine; M, months; M-MIN, 50 mg of monthly minodronate; N/A, not analyzed; OC, osteocalcin; PLC, placebo; P1NP, type I collagen N-terminal propeptide; RLX, raloxifene; SE, standard error; TH, total hip; TPTD, 20 μg of daily teriparatide; TRACP-5b, tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase-5b; ucOC, undercarboxylated osteocalcin; uDPD, urinary deoxypyridinoline; uNTX, urinary N-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen; VK, vitamin K2; W-ALN, 35 mg of weekly alendronate; W-RIS, 35 mg of weekly risedronate.
Comparisons of lumbar BMD change and vertebral fracture risk reduction among bisphosphonates over 2–3 years
| BP | Study | Age (years) | Patients | n | FU (years) | Lumbar spine BMD change | RR for VF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minodronate 1 mg daily | Matsumoto et al | 55–80 | Women with 1–5 VF and BMD <80% | MIN 359 | 2 | N/A | 59% |
| Hagino et al | MIN 226 | 3 | +10.4% | 42% | |||
| Alendronate 5 or 10 mg daily | Liberman et al | 45–80 | Women with BMD <2.5 SD YAM of | ALN 526 | 3 | +8.8% greater than PLC | 48% |
| Black et al | 55–80 | Women with existing VF | ALN 1,022 | 3 | +6.2% greater than PLC | 54% | |
| Women without VF and a | ALN 819 | 3 | N/A | 16% | |||
| Risedronate 2.5 or 5 mg daily | Harris et al | <85 | Women with ≥2 VF and a | RIS 678 | 3 | +5.4% | 41% |
| Reginster et al | ≤85 | Women with at least 2 VFs | RIS 346 | 3 | +5.9% greater than PLC | 49% | |
| Zoledronate 5 mg yearly | Black et al | 65–89 | Women with a | ZOL 3,861 | 3 | +6.7% greater than PLC | 70% |
Note:
Patients in PLC group were administered daily minodronate for 2 years.
Abbreviations: ALN, alendronate; BMD, bone mineral density; BP, bisphosphonate; FU, follow-up period; MIN, minodronate; N/A, not analyzed; PLC, placebo; RIS, risedronate; RR, relative risk reduction rate; VF, vertebral fracture; YAM, young adult mean; ZOL, zoledronate.