| Literature DB >> 30080871 |
Gillian Wheater1,2, Mohsen Elshahaly2,3, Kamran Naraghi4, Stephen P Tuck2,5, Harish K Datta2, Jacob M van Laar2,6.
Abstract
Data describing the effect of in vivo B cell depletion on general bone loss in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are limited. Given the pathogenetic role of B cells in RA, it is tempting to speculate that B cell depletion might have a beneficial effect on bone loss. We prospectively investigated the changes in bone mineral density (BMD), bone turnover, inflammation and disease activity before and after rituximab in 45 RA patients over a 12 month period, 36 patients of whom completed the study and were included in the analysis. There was no significant change in our primary endpoint; lumbar spine BMD after 12 months. However, we found a significant decrease in neck of femur (mean -0.017 g/cm2, 95% CI -0.030, -0.004 p = 0.011) and total femur BMD (mean -0.016 g/cm2, 95% CI -0.025, -0.007 p = 0.001). Additionally, there was a significant increase in procollagen type 1 amino-terminal propeptide (P1NP) and bone specific alkaline phosphatase (BAP); biomarkers of bone formation (median change from baseline to 12 months; P1NP 11.3 μg/L, 95% CI -1.1, 24.8 p = 0.025; BAP 2.5 μg/L, 95% CI 1.2, 3.6 p = 0.002), but no significant change in bone resorption or osteocyte markers. The fall in BMD occurred despite improvement in disease control. Post-menopausal women had the lowest mean lumbar spine, femoral and forearm BMD at baseline and after 12 months, additionally they had a higher level of bone turnover throughout the study. In conclusion, BMD was maintained at the lumbar spine and forearm, but fell at the femur sites. A high prevalence of vitamin D deficiency was observed and these patients had lower BMD and evidence of higher bone turnover.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30080871 PMCID: PMC6078302 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0201527
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Consort flow diagram.
Forty-seven patients were screened; 2 patients did not meet the eligibility criteria and so 45 were enrolled onto the study. One patient was subsequently diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia therefore only 44 patients received the first course of rituximab. A further 8 patients did not complete the study and a total of 36 patients were included in the final analysis; of these only 32 received the second RTX course.
Baseline characteristics of the study patients.
| Characteristics no. (%) | Completed study (n = 36) |
|---|---|
| 58.6 (12.1) | |
| 7 (19) | |
| 29 (81) | |
| 6 (21) | |
| 23 (79) | |
| 34 (94) | |
| 2 (6) | |
| 12 (33) | |
| 11 (31) | |
| 13 (36) | |
| 1 (3) | |
| 2 (6) | |
| 22 (61) | |
| 5 (14) | |
| 11 (31) | |
| 4 (11) | |
| 29.4 (8.0) | |
| 10.4 (7.0) | |
| 30 (83) | |
| 25 (76) | |
| 5.74 (2.24, 8.01) | |
| 1.92 (0.43) | |
| 32 (2, 128) | |
| 11.7 (0.4, 114.7) | |
| 85 (25) | |
| 30.2 (14.1, 87.7) | |
| 36.1 (12.0, 141.0) | |
| 30.1 (0.1, 70.9) | |
| 60.1 (0.6, 142.3) | |
| 12.4 (5.0, 26.0) | |
| 49.7 (18.5, 80.0) | |
| 423 (41, 1167) | |
| 39.8 (10.9, 209.9) | |
| 17.2 (8.3, 37.3) | |
| 3.0 (1.1, 4.9) | |
| 47.9 (18.5, 119.4) | |
| 53.4 (29.2, 88.2) | |
| 1.171 (0.245) | |
| -0.4 (-2.6, 6.1) | |
| 0.4 (-2.7, 7.8) | |
| 0.884 (0.140) | |
| -0.7 (-2.9, 1.0) | |
| 0.3 (-1.6, 1.9) | |
| 0.944 (0.153) | |
| -0.5 (-2.7, 2.1) | |
| 0.3 (-1.8, 2.8) | |
| 0.381 (0.102) | |
| -1.1 (-3.8, 8.6) | |
| -0.6 (-2.6, 10.4) |
Change in mean bone mineral density from baseline to 12 months.
| Baseline mean (SD) | 12 month mean (SD) | Mean change baseline to 12 months (95% CI) | p value change baseline to 12 months | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.171 (0.245) | 1.161 (0.250) | -0.010 (-0.029, 0.009) | 0.302 | |
| 0.884 (0.140) | 0.867 (0.143) | -0.017 (-0.030, -0.004) | ||
| 0.944 (0.153) | 0.928 (0.150) | -0.016 (-0.025, -0.007) | ||
| 0.381 (0.102) | 0.380 (0.114) | -0.002 (-0.013, 0.010) | 0.787 |
Bone mineral density (BMD) was measured in lumbar spine (n = 36) mean L2-L4. Also neck of femur (n = 35), total femur (n = 35) and ultra-distal radius (n = 31), the results were reported as mean of both sides. All measured at time 0 before the 1st rituximab infusion and after 12 months in patients who completed the study. Results were expressed as mean and standard deviation (SD) at baseline and 12 months, the mean change from baseline was assessed by paired t-test.
Fig 2The effects of gender and menopausal status on mean bone mineral density.
Bone mineral density (BMD) was plotted at lumbar spine; mean L2-L4 (LS BMD), also neck of femur (MN BMD), total femur (MT BMD) and ultra-distal radius (MRUD BMD) mean of both sides, at time 0 before the 1st rituximab infusion and after 12 months in patients who completed the study (n = 36). Patients were also stratified by gender and menopausal status (7 males, 6 pre-menopausal and 23 post-menopausal females).
Change in median biomarkers from baseline to 12 months.
| Baseline median (range) | 12 Month median (range) | Median change baseline to 12 months (95% CI) | p valuechange baseline to 12 months | Median % change baseline across all 4 visits (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 423 (41, 1167) | 384 (135, 1091) | -7 (-57, 59) | 0.993 | -8.0 (-23.0, 15.0) | |
| 3.0 (1.1, 4.9) | 2.9 (1.5, 4.6) | 0.1 (-0.3, 0.3) | 0.638 | 0.0 (-7.0, 8.0) | |
| 39.8 (10.9, 209.9) | 48.8 (16.8, 125.0) | 11.3 (-1.1, 24.8) | 30.0 (3.0, 50) | ||
| 17.2 (8.3, 37.3) | 19.3 (10.9, 40.3) | 2.5 (1.2, 3.6) | 13.0 (4.0, 19.0) | ||
| 53.4 (29.2, 88.2) | 55.7 (33.0, 89.0) | 3.2 (-3.5, 8.6) | 0.139 | 0.1 (-3.0, 8.0) | |
| 47.9 (18.5, 119.4) | 51.5 (13.5, 150.8) | 2.2 (-9.0, 9.7) | 0.561 | -2.0 (-10.0, 14.0) | |
| 11.7 (0.4, 114.7) | 6.4 (0.2, 64.4) | -3.7 (-10.3, 0.7) | -21.0 (-49.0, 75.0) | ||
| 32 (2, 128) | 17 (2, 43) | -8 (-19, 1) | -20.0 (-50.0, 25.0) | ||
| 5.74 (2.24, 8.01) | 4.60 (1.38, 6.35) | -0.84 (-1.64, -0.41) | 19.0 (-27.0, -14.0) |
Markers of bone resorption (βCTx: β-isomerised carboxy terminal telopeptide of type I collagen; TRAP5b: tartrate resistant acid phosphatase isoform 5b), bone formation (P1NP: procollagen type 1 amino-terminal propeptide; BAP: bone specific alkaline phosphatase), osteocyte markers (SCL: sclerostin; DKK-1: dickkopf-related protein 1), inflammatory markers (CRP: C reactive protein; ESR: erythrocyte sedimentation rate;) and disease activity (DAS28: disease activity score using 28 tender and swollen joints) were measured at baseline before the rituximab infusion and then at 3, 6, 9 and 12 months in all patients who completed the study. Results were not normally distributed and were expressed as median and range, median change from baseline to 12 months was assessed using Wilcoxon signed rank test and the median percentage change from baseline across all 4 visits was calculated.
Fig 3The effects of gender and menopausal status on median levels of biomarkers.
Serial blood samples were taken at time 0 before the first rituximab infusion and then at 3 monthly intervals over one year, a second rituximab cycle was given if clinically indicated at 6 months. Median concentrations were plotted at each visit (all patients n = 34; post-menopausal females n = 22; pre-menopausal females n = 6; males n = 6) for the following biomarkers (y axis): β-isomerised carboxy terminal telopeptide of type I collagen (βCTx); tartrate resistant acid phosphatase isoform 5b (TRAP5b); procollagen type 1 amino-terminal propeptide (P1NP); bone specific alkaline phosphatase (BAP); sclerostin (SCL); dickkopf-related protein 1 (DKK-1).
Fig 4The effects of vitamin D on mean bone mineral density and median levels of biomarkers.