Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8723042 | Journal of Clinical Densitometry | 2017 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
In postmenopausal women, 2âyr of combined teriparatide and denosumab increases bone mineral density more than either drug alone, and switching from either combination or teriparatide to denosumab for an additional 2âyr further increases bone mineral density. Conversely, switching from denosumab to teriparatide results in transient bone loss. The effects of these interventions on spine microarchitecture are unknown. In the DATA and DATA-Switch studies, 94 postmenopausal osteoporotic women were randomized to receive 24âmo of teriparatide (20âµg daily), denosumab (60âmg every 6âmo), or both. Then, women originally assigned to 24âmo of teriparatide received 24âmo of denosumab, whereas subjects originally randomized to 24âmo of denosumab received 24âmo of teriparatide. Subjects who received both drugs received an additional 24âmo of denosumab alone. Spine trabecular bone score (TBS, a gray-level textural assessment of bone microarchitecture) was measured blinded from treatment groups using images from 2-dimensional dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry spine scans at 0, 12, 24, 30, 36, and 48âmo in 65 women who had posterior-anterior spine dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry images suitable for TBS analysis. After 24âmo, TBS increased by 2.7â±â4.7% in the teriparatide group (pâ=â0.009 vs baseline), by 1.8â±â5.0% in the denosumab group (pâ=â0.118 vs baseline), and by 4.5â±â6.7% in the combination group (pâ=â0.017 vs baseline), with no significant between-group differences. In the 6âmo after the treatments were switched (months 24-30), TBS continued to increase in the combination-to-denosumab and teriparatide-to-denosumab groups but decreased by â1.1â±â4.0% in the denosumab-to-teriparatide group (pâ<â0.05 vs other groups). After 48âmo, compared to month 0, TBS increased by 5.1â±â5.8% in the teriparatide-to-denosumab group, by 3.6â±â4.2% in the denosumab-to-teriparatide group, and by 6.1â±â4.7% in the combination-to-denosumab group (pâ<â0.001 vs baseline for all groups, pâ=ânot significant for between-group differences). Switching from teriparatide to denosumab also increased spine TBS. Conversely, switching from denosumab to teriparatide transiently degraded spine trabecular microarchitecture, the clinical consequences of which require further study.
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Authors
Joy N. Tsai, Linda A. Jiang, Hang Lee, Didier Hans, Benjamin Z. Leder,