| Literature DB >> 34366868 |
Shan-Shan Li1, Shi-Hao He1, Peng-Yu Xie1, Wei Li1, Xin-Xin Zhang1, Tian-Fang Li1, Dai-Feng Li2,3.
Abstract
Osteoporosis (OP) is a chronic bone disease characterized by aberrant microstructure and macrostructure of bone, leading to reduced bone mass and increased risk of fragile fractures. Anti-resorptive drugs, especially, bisphosphonates, are currently the treatment of choice in most developing countries. However, they do have limitations and adverse effects, which, to some extent, helped the development of anabolic drugs such as teriparatide and romosozumab. In patients with high or very high risk for fracture, sequential or combined therapies may be considered with the initial drugs being anabolic agents. Great endeavors have been made to find next generation drugs with maximal efficacy and minimal toxicity, and improved understanding of the role of different signaling pathways and their crosstalk in the pathogenesis of OP may help achieve this goal. Our review focused on recent progress with regards to the drug development by modification of Wnt pathway, while other pathways/molecules were also discussed briefly. In addition, new observations made in recent years in bone biology were summarized and discussed for the treatment of OP.Entities:
Keywords: anabolic drugs; antiresorptive drugs; bone formation; osteoporosis; wnt signaling pathway
Year: 2021 PMID: 34366868 PMCID: PMC8339209 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2021.717065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1Bone remodeling and therapeutic targets for osteoporosis. RANK: Receptor activator of nuclear factor-kb; RANKL: RANK ligand; OPG: osteoprotegerin.
Currently available and promising anti-resorptive agents.
| Classification | Category | Medicine | Property | Adverse events/limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antiresorptive drugs | Bisphosphonates ( | Alendronate | i) An analog of inorganic pyrophosphate with a high affinity for bone hydroxyapatite | i) Osteonecrosis of the jaw |
| Risedronate | ||||
| Ibandronate | ||||
| Zoledronic acid | ||||
| Estrogen ( | Estrogen | i) Directly enhancing osteogenic differentiation of MSCs and suppressing osteoblasts apoptosis | i) Lingering risk on cardiovascular | |
| Selective estrogen receptor modulators | Raloxifene ( | Interaction with ERs and a range of tissue-specific agonist and antagonist effects | Compared to estrogen, without adverse effects on the breast. ( | |
| Bazedoxifene ( | ||||
| RANKL inhibitor | Denosumab ( | Blocking RANKL-RANK interaction by neutralizing RANKL to inhibit bone resorption. ( | i) Osteonecrosis of the jaw | |
| Promising anti-resorptive drugs | Cathepsin K inhibitor | Odanacatib | i) Prevention of bone resorption without affecting bone formation and continuous increase of spinal BMD in postmenopausal women. ( | Stroke ( |
| ONO-5334 | Robust and persistent increase of trabecular and integral BMD. ( | The effect on biochemical markers was rapidly reversible on treatment cessation ( | ||
| MIV-711 | Significant reduction of the biomarkers of bone resorption and cartilage loss. ( | The RCT trails were conducted only in osteoarthritis currently ( | ||
| αvβ3 integrin antagonist | L-000845704 | Significant increase in spinal BMD. ( | Only several preclinical studies | |
| HSA-ARLDDL | Prevention of ovariectomized-induced reduction in cancellous bone volume, bone surface, and trabecular number in rats ( | |||
| M-CSFRGD | i) A dual-specific protein able to bind to and inhibit both c-FMS and αvβ3 integrin | |||
| Chloride channel-7 inhibitor | N53736 | i) Overcoming the defect in bone degradation due to the inability to acidify the sealing zone | No clinical trials |
Available anabolic drugs.
| Category | Medicine | Property | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parathyroid hormone receptor agonist | Teriparatide ( | i) Acting on PTH1R on the surface of osteoblasts and resulting in the induction and transient signalling of intracellular cAMP. ( | i) Hypercalcaemia |
| mAb against sclerostin | Romosozumab | i) It is pro-anabolic but anti-resorptive by neutralizing sclerostin | i) Cardiovascular events |
| ii) Osteoarthritis ( | |||
| Blosozumab | Phase 3 results are awaited |
FIGURE 2Wnt signaling pathway in bone formation. APC: adenomatous polyposis coli; CaMKII: calcium calmodulin-mediated kinase II; CK1: casein kinase one; Dvl: dishevelled; FZD: frizzled; GSK3β: glycogen synthase kinase 3β; JNK: c-Jun N-terminal kinase; LRP: low density lipoprotein receptor related protein; NFAT: nuclear factor of activated T cells; RUNX2: runt-related transcription factor 2; TCF/LEF: T-cell specific transcription factor/lymphoid enhancer binding factor.
Clinical trials assessing the efficacy of romosozumab in osteoporosis.
| Trial and year | Rationale/Question Behind study | Design | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|
| Frame, 2016 ( | Compare the incidence of fractures between romosozumab-to-denosumab group and the placebo-to-denosumab group in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis | Subcutaneous injections of romosozumab (210 mg monthly) or placebo for 12 months, followed by subcutaneous injection of denosumab (60 mg every 6 months) for 12 months | The rates of fractures were significantly lower in the romosozumab group than in the placebo group |
| Arch, 2017 ( | Compare the incidence of fractures between romosozumab-to-alendronate group and the alendronate-to-alendronate group in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis | Randomly assigned patients to receive monthly subcutaneous romosozumab (210 mg) or weekly oral alendronate (70 mg) for 12 months, followed by open label alendronate | Compared to alendronate alone, romosozumab treatment for 12 months followed by alendronate resulted in a significantly lower risk of fracture |
| STRUCTURE, 2017 ( | Evaluated the effects of romosozumab or teriparatide on BMD in women with postmenopausal osteoporosis transitioning from bisphosphonates therapy | Patients were randomly assigned to receive subcutaneous romosozumab (210 mg once monthly) or subcutaneous teriparatide (20 µg once daily) after at least 3 years of oral bisphosphonates | Compared to teriparatide, bone mass and strength increased to a greater extent in women treated with romosozumab |
| Bridge, 2018 ( | Evaluate the safety and efficacy of romosozumab in men with osteoporosis | The subjects were randomized to receive romosozumab 210 mg subcutaneously monthly or placebo for 12 months | Compared with placebo,treatment with romosozumab for 12 months increased BMD significantly and was well tolerated |
FIGURE 3Interaction of Wnt signaling with other signaling pathways. AKT: protein kinase B; AMPK: adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase; BMP: bone morphogenetic protein; BMPR: BMP receptor; ERK: extracellular signal-regulated kinase; GF: growth factor; MEK: mitogen-activated protein kinase; NELL-1: NEL-like protein one; PI3K: phosphoinositide 3-kinase; Smad: small mothers against decapentaplegic; TRAF: TNF receptor-associated factors.
Combination therapies.
| Anabolic agents | Anti-resorptive drugs | Methods | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| PTH (1–84) | Alendronate ( | Randomly assigned patients to daily treatment with parathyroid hormone (1–84) (100 µg), alendronate (10 mg), or both for 12 months | i) There was no evidence of synergy between parathyroid hormone and alendronate |
| PTH (1–84) | Ibandronate ( | Participants received either 6 months of concurrent PTH and ibandronate, followed by 18 months of ibandronate (concurrent) or two sequential courses of 3 months of PTH followed by 9 months of ibandronate (sequential) over 2 years | i) BMD did not increase more than with either treatment alone |
| Teriparatide | Zoledronic Acid ( | Randomly assigned patients to receive a single intravenous infusion of zoledronic acid 5 mg plus daily teriparatide 20 mg | A beneficial effect of co-administration of teriparatide and zoledronic acid treatment was shown as compared to teriparatide or zoledronic acid monotherapy |
| Teriparatide | Denosumab ( | Patients were assigned in a 1:1:1 ratio to receive 20 µg teriparatide daily, 60 mg denosumab every 6 months, or both | Combined teriparatide and denosumab increased BMD more than either agent alone |
| Participants were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive teriparatide 20 µg (standard dose) or 40 µg (high dose) daily for 9 months. At 3 months, both groups were started on denosumab 60 mg every 6 months for 12 months | Combined treatment with teriparatide 40 µg and denosumab increased BMD more than standard combination therapy |
Sequential therapies.
| Initial agents | Subsequent agents | Methods | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Teriparatide | Denosumab | Subjects were switched from both the combination and teriparatide groups to denosumab, and subjects in the denosumab group were switched to teriparatide. In all groups, 24 months of additional treatment were given. ( | In postmenopausal osteoporotic women switching from teriparatide to denosumab, BMD continued to increase |
| Denosumab | Teriparatide | In postmenopausal osteoporotic women switching from denosumab to teriparatide results in progressive or transient bone loss | |
| Abaloparatide | Alendronate ( | Patients who had been randomized to either placebo or abaloparatide (80 µg daily) for 18 months were subsequently treated with oral alendronate (70 mg weekly) for an additional 24 months | Sequential abaloparatide followed by alendronate had a greater reducion in the risk of fractures and BMD increased more |
| Romosozumab | Denosumab ( | Patients received romosozumab or placebo (month 0–12) followed by denosumab (month 12–36) | BMD were further augmented and fracture risk was reduced by switching from romosozumab to denosumab |