| Literature DB >> 32792004 |
Yves Maugars1, Pascale Guillot2, Joëlle Glémarec2, Jean-Marie Berthelot2, Benoit Le Goff2, Christelle Darrieutort-Laffite2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rebound effect after stopping treatment with denosumab may be associated with rapid loss of the gains in bone mineral density achieved with treatment, high levels of bone remodeling markers, the occurrence of vertebral fractures, and even hypercalcemia. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Denosumab rebound; Fracture; Hypercalcemia; Hyperparathyroidism; Osteoporosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32792004 PMCID: PMC7427054 DOI: 10.1186/s13256-020-02401-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Patient’s characteristics during follow up
| Clinical presentation | Fractures | T-score lumbar/total hip BMD (SD) | Calcaemia (mmol/l) | Treatments | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Follow up of the patient (January 2005) | Bicycle fall | L2 | −3.2/−2.1 | 2.50 | Initiation: denosumab (60 mg semi-annually), calcium (1 g daily), vitamin D (800 IU daily) |
| FREEDOM 3-year evaluation (January 2008) | No pain | T5, T8, and aggravation of L2 | −2.2/−1.7 | 2.52 | Pursuit: denosumab (60 mg semi-annually), calcium (1 g daily), vitamin D (800 IU daily) |
| FREEDOM extension (September 2013) | No pain | No new fracture | −1.6/−1.1 | 2.73 | All treatments stopped |
| Hospitalization (June 2014) | Acute intense dorsal pain | T4, T9, T10, T11, L1, L3 | −2.0/−1.3 | 2.83 | None |
| New evaluation (September 2016) | Chronic dorsal and lumbar pain | No new fracture | −2.9/−2.3 | 2.47 | Zoledronate (two infusions of 5 mg annually), vitamin D (100,000 IU quarterly) |
| New evaluation (August 2018) | Chronic lumbar pain | No new fracture | −2.9/−2.3 | 2.60 | Treatments stopped |
BMD bone mineral density, L1 first lumbar vertebra, L2 second lumbar vertebra, L3 third lumbar vertebra, SD standard deviation, T4 fourth thoracic vertebra, T5 fifth thoracic vertebra, T8 eighth thoracic vertebra, T9 ninth thoracic vertebra, T10 tenth thoracic vertebra, T11 11th thoracic vertebra
Fig. 1Calcemia, bone mineral density, and fracture events for a patient treated with denosumab for 9 years who experienced a rebound effect when treatment was stopped, with a combination of hypercalcemia related to hyperparathyroidism, multiple fractures, and rapid bone loss
Fig. 2Lumbar and thoracic X-ray in January 2013, 3 months before denosumab was stopped, and in June 2014, 14 months after denosumab was stopped: three old vertebral fractures (L2 in 2004 and T5 T8 L2 (aggravation) during the period 2005-2008)(stars) and 6 new fractures (T4 T9 T10 T11 L1 L3)(arrows) with denosumab rebound. Stars are the old fractures and arrows the new one
Fig. 3Bone scintigraphy, computed tomography scan, and magnetic resonance imaging in June 2014. Magnetic resonance imaging and bone scintigraphy confirmed that there were six recent vertebral fractures (fourth thoracic vertebra, ninth thoracic vertebra, tenth thoracic vertebra, 11th thoracic vertebra, first lumbar vertebra, and third lumbar vertebra): small white arrows. There were some costal fractures on bone scintigraphy: sixth posterior on the right side and laterally tenth, 11th, and 12th on the left side (black arrows). A computed tomography scan also showed old vertebral fractures (fifth thoracic vertebra, eighth thoracic vertebra, and second lumbar vertebra): white stars