| Literature DB >> 34137924 |
Louise Aaltonen1, Niina Koivuviita2, Marko Seppänen3,4, Inari S Burton5, Heikki Kröger5,6, Eliisa Löyttyniemi7, Kaj Metsärinne2.
Abstract
Bone biopsy is the gold standard for characterization of renal osteodystrophy (ROD). However, the classification of the subtypes of ROD based on histomorphometric parameters is not unambiguous and the range of normal values for turnover differ in different publications. 18F-Sodium Fluoride positron emission tomography (18F-NaF PET) is a dynamic imaging technique that measures turnover. 18F-NaF PET has previously been shown to correlate with histomorphometric parameters. In this cross-sectional study, 26 patients on dialysis underwent a 18F-NaF PET and a bone biopsy. Bone turnover-based classification was assessed using Malluche's historical reference values for normal bone turnover. In unified turnover-mineralization-volume (TMV)-based classification, the whole histopathological picture was evaluated and the range for normal turnover was set accordingly. Fluoride activity was measured in the lumbar spine (L1-L4) and at the anterior iliac crest. On the basis of turnover-based classification of ROD, 12% had high turnover and 61% had low turnover bone disease. On the basis of unified TMV-based classification of ROD, 42% had high turnover/hyperparathyroid bone disease and 23% had low turnover/adynamic bone disease. When using unified TMV-based classification of ROD, 18F-NaF PET had an AUC of 0.86 to discriminate hyperparathyroid bone disease from other types of ROD and an AUC of 0.87, for discriminating adynamic bone disease. There was a disproportion between turnover-based classification and unified TMV-based classification. More research is needed to establish normal range of bone turnover in patients with CKD and to establish the role of PET imaging in ROD.Entities:
Keywords: 18F-NaF-PET; Bone histomorphometry; Bone turnover; CKD; Hyperparathyroidism; Renal osteodystrophy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34137924 PMCID: PMC8531121 DOI: 10.1007/s00223-021-00874-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Calcif Tissue Int ISSN: 0171-967X Impact factor: 4.333
Characteristics of the study group
| No. of patients | 26 |
| Female sex (%) | 13 (50) |
| Age, year (median, range) | 66 (37–83) |
| BMI (mean, SD) | 23.9 ± 3.5 |
| Smoker (%) | 6 (23) |
| History of diabetes (%) | 9 (35) |
| Dialysis vintage, month (median, range) | 10 (6–37) |
| Laboratory parameters | |
| fS-calcium-ion 1.16–1.13 mmol/l (median, IQR) | 1.17 (1.11–1.23) |
| fP-phosphorus 0.71–1.23 mmol/l (median, IQR) | 1.61 (1.41–1.99) |
| fP-PTH 15–65 ng/l (median, IQR) | 285 (178–537) |
| P-D-25 > 50 nmol/l (median, IQR) | 70 (40–94) |
| S-D-125 37–216 pmol/l (median, IQR) | 30 (24–58) |
| P-tALP 35–105 U/l (median, IQR) | 88 (67–132) |
| P-Alb 36–45 g/l (median, IQR) | 31.9 (27.8–33.6) |
| Medication | |
| Calcimimetic (%) | 4 (15) |
| Alfacalcidol, Paricalcitol (%) | 14 (58) |
| Calcium carbonate (%) | 22 (85) |
| Cholecalciferol (%) | 23 (88) |
| Sevelamer/lantane carbonate (%) | 16 (62) |
| Corticosteroid (%) | 2 (8) |
Fig. 1Distribution of renal osteodystrophy categories—bone turnover-based versus unified TMV-based classification
Histomorphometric and imaging parameters in dialysis patients according to distribution of renal osteodystrophy categories–turnover-based (a) and unified TMV-based (b) classification
| a—Turnover-based classification | High turnover ( | Normal turnover ( | Low turnover ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BFR/BS (µm3/µm2/year) | 35.0 (33.9–39.3) | 24.8 (20.2–30.0) | 7.5 (53–12.5) | < 0.001 |
| Ac.f (1/year) | 0.82 (0.67–0.83) | 0.49 (0.46–0.57) | 0.19 (0.15–0.31) | < 0.001 |
| Oc.S/BS (%) | 3.5 (1.4–6.7) | 2.5 (1.4–3.3) | 0.8 (0.11–1.7) | 0.02 |
| Ob.s/BS (%) | 7.2 (3.2–16.9) | 4.9 (3.2–14.0) | 2.0 (0.2–4.6) | 0.005 |
| Mlt (d) | 31.4 (22.3–34.8) | 33.8 (25.5–35.9) | 57.6 (33.1–100.5) | 0.05 |
| MS/BS (%) | 9.5 (9.4–10.7) | 6.5 (5.1–9.2) | 2.9 (2.0–5.5) | 0.002 |
| O.th (µm) | 8.7 (7.2–10.0) | 7.4 (6.1–10.6) | 5.7 (5.0–6.8) | 0.02 |
| MAR (µm/day) | 1.01 (0.99–1.01) | 1.03 (0.8–1.2) | 0.7 (0.6–0.9) | 0.008 |
| OS/BS (%) | 38.4 (24.1–40.8) | 27.5 (20.9–36.6) | 24.8 (19.3–31.8) | 0.27 |
| ES/BS (%) | 4.0 (2.4–6.9) | 3.8 (2.8–4.8) | 1.6 (0.7–2.9) | 0.03 |
| OV/BV (%) | 6.8 (5.5–7.8) | 3.5 (3.4–5.7) | 3.0 (2.4–4.0) | 0.02 |
| BV/TV (%) | 18.2 (18.1–25.0) | 22.8(18.8–27.2) | 18.7 (14.1–24.9) | 0.56 |
| Mean Ki (L1-L4) mL/min/mL | 0.067 (0.055–0.077) | 0.053 (0.032–0.059) | 0.038 (0.031–0.045) | 0.02 |
| Mean FUR (hip) mL/min/mL | 0.065 (0.050–0.066) | 0.056 (0.041–0.073) | 0.039 (0.032–0.046) | 0.01 |
Data are presented as median (interquartile range)
In the turnover-based classification, Malluche´s reference values for normal turnover were used: BFR/BS 18–38 µm/y and Ac.f 0.49–0.74/year
In the unified TMV-based classification, reference values for normal turnover (Recker et co, mean ± 1SD) in men was: BFR/BS 3.6–18.8 µm/year and Ac.f 0.12–0.6, in postmenopausal women: BFR/BS 6–22 um/year and Ac.f 0.11–0.49/year and in premenopausal women: BFR/BS 3–13 µm/y and Ac.f 0.04–0.26/year
Mean Ki (L1-L4) reflects the fluoride activity in the PET scan in the lumbar spine and Mean FUR (hip) the fluoride activity at the anterior iliac crest. p < 0.05 is statistically significant
BFR/BS bone formation rate per bone surface, Oc.S/BS osteoclast surface per bone surface, Ob.S/BS osteoblast surface per bone surface, MAR mineral apposition rate, Mlt mineralization lag time, MS/BS mineralized surface per bone surface, O.th osteoid thickness, Ac.f activation frequency per year, OS/BS osteoid surface per bone surface, ES/BS erosion surface per bone surface, OV/BV osteoid volume of bone volume, BV/TV bone volume of tissue volume
Association between turnover-based and unified TMV-based classification of ROD
| Turnover-based classification | Unified TMV-based classification | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low turnover—AD | Normal turnover—mild HPT/normal | High turnover—HPT | Total | |
| Low turnover | 6 | 9 | 1 | 16 |
| Normal turnover | 0 | 0 | 7 | 7 |
| High turnover | 0 | 0 | 3 | 3 |
| Total | 6 | 9 | 11 | 26 |
In cases of low turnover/adynamic bone disease all the subjects matched to turnover-based classification. In cases of hyperparathyroid bone disease, only 27% of the subjects matched
Of 26 subjects, only nine matched, 34% (Kappa’s test was 0.19). Patients with normal turnover/normal bone or mild hyperparathyroid bone disease were classified as low turnover and patients with high turnover/hyperparathyroid bone disease were classified as normal turnover when using Malluche’s reference values for normal bone turnover
AD adynamic bone disease, HPT hyperparathyroid bone disease
Fig. 2Fluoride activity in the lumbar spine and at the anterior iliac crest in the control group and according to turnover-based and unified TMV-based classification of ROD. Tukey’s box-plot figure illustrates the fluoride activity in the control group and in the two classification groups. K (L1–L4) fluoride activity in the lumbar spine, FUR (hip) fluoride activity at the anterior iliac crest, HPT hyperparathyroid bone disease
18F-NaF PET’s diagnostic accuracy in ROD
| Variables | AUC | Criterion | Sensitivity (%) | Specificity (%) | NPV (%) | PPV (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a. 18F-NaF PET strength to recognize high turnover/hyperparathyroid bone disease | |||||||
18F-fluoride activity in the PET scan unified TMV-based | 0.86 | Cut-off > 0.055 Ml/min/Ml | 82 | 100 | 88 | 100 | |
PTH unified TMV-based | 0.69 | > 450 ng/ml | 55 | 87 | 72 | 75 | |
| b. 18F-NaF PET strength to recognize low turnover/adynamic bone disease | |||||||
18F-fluoride activity in the PET scan unified TMV-based | 0.87 | Cut-off < 0.038 Ml/min/Ml | 100 | 70 | 100 | 50 | |
18F-fluoride activity in the PET scan turnover -based | 0.83 | Cut-off < 0.038 Ml/min/Ml | 63 | 80 | 57 | 83 | |
| PTH—unified TMV-based | 0.78 | < 185 ng/ml | 67 | 85 | 89 | 57 | |
| PTH—turnover-based | 0.68 | < 185 ng/ml | 31 | 80 | 42 | 71 | |