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Overview Page 1
Osteoporosis and bone
quality
The diagnosis of osteoporosis requires an
assessment of risk factors, the documentation
of fractures, an evaluation of potential
secondary causes of bone loss and, most
importantly, measurement of bone mineral
density (BMD). Studies have demonstrated
a direct relationship between bone density
and bone strength1 and reductions in BMD
in postmenopausal women are associated
with an increased risk of fracture.2
However, there is a growing awareness that
a reduction in bone mineral density is not
the sole pathology underlying osteoporosis,
nor do increases in BMD completely explain
successful therapy. Patients with similar
BMDs may have significantly different
fracture risks; and agents with differing
effects on BMD may produce similar
reductions in fracture risk.3 The missing
factor appears to be bone quality. Legrand
et al examined the relationship between
the quality of trabecular bone and vertebral
crush fractures in 44 male patients with
osteoporosis.4 There were no significant differences
in BMD in patients with or without
fractures. However, patients with at least one
vertebral fracture had significant alterations
in trabecular bone architecture compared
with those who were fracture-free. The
study suggests that altered trabecular bone
architecture is a major determinant of osteoporotic
fracture risk in men.
As the studies discussed below
suggest, a universally accepted
definition of bone quality does
not exist. Several factors may
be involved; the most important is probably
the microarchitecture of bone. In high
quality bone, the trabeculae are greater
in number, thicker, more platelike, and
better connected.3 To these characteristics,
Schnitzler adds higher mineralization and
less fatigue damage (which is influenced by
turnover rate).5 Improved secondary mineralization,
changes in cortical porosity, and
the health of osteocytes may also play roles in
the quality of bone.3 Bone quality, as well
as quantity, declines with age. The trabecular
network becomes progressively disconnected
and weaker. Old osteocytes die, leading to
hypermineralization and brittleness. Bone
collagen becomes unstable and unremodeled
bone acquires accumulated fatigue damage.5
Effects of osteoporosis
therapies on bone quality
Many osteoporosis therapies have been
found to affect bone quality as well as its
mineral density. Turner notes that anabolic
therapies, such as parathyroid hormone
(PTH; also known as teriparatide), increase
bone turnover and porosity, which can offset
some of the positive effects on bone
strength. Antiresorptive therapies reduce
bone turnover, causing increased bone mineralization,
which can increase brittleness.6
However, recent studies, both animal and
human, suggest that the preservation or
improvement of bone microarchitecture
accounts for an important part of the benefits
of several current osteoporosis medications.
In a study by Borah et al, the effects of
risedronate on bone mass and architecture
were evaluated in ovariectomized minipigs.
The animals were treated daily for 18
months with either vehicle or risedronate at
doses of 0.5 mg/kg/day or 2.5 mg/kg/day.
Bone architecture was measured by 3-D
microcomputed tomography. Bone volume
was higher in both treated groups (p<0.05),
but bone architecture changes were more
significant at the 2.5 mg/kg/day dose. At
the higher dose of risedronate, trabecular
thickness, trabecular number, and connectivity
were higher and trabecular separation
was lower compared with animals treated
with vehicle (p<0.05). Both normalized
maximum load (an index of strength) and
normalized stiffness of vertebral cores were
higher in the 2.5 mg/kg/day group compared
with the vehicle group (p<0.05).
Vertebral bone volume alone accounted for
76% of the variability in bone strength,while
the combination of bone volume and
architectural variables accounted for
more than 90% of bone strength. The
investigators concluded that risedronate
preserved trabecular architecture and
that bone strength is tightly coupled to
both bone mass and architecture.
In a three-year trial, biochemical and histological
studies assessed bone quality and
turnover in women randomized to placebo
or alendronate 5 or 10 mg/day for three
years or 20 mg/day for two years, followed
by 5 mg/day for one year.7 All patients also
received 500 mg/day of calcium carbonate.
Transiliac bone biopsies were obtained
from 231 patients from Phase III alendronate
studies at the end of either 24 or 36
months of continuous treatment. In patients
receiving active treatment, decreased bone
resorption was followed by decreases in
bone formation. A steady state of bone
turnover was achieved after six months of
treatment. All 231 biopsy samples were
evaluated for the presence or absence of
qualitative abnormalities. The investigators
found that alendronate did not impair bone
mineralization, induce the formation of
woven bone, marrow fibrosis, or focal
osteomalacia, or have any other adverse
effects on bone quality.
In a similar three-year trial, the effects of
oral risedronate 5 mg/day on bone quality
and remodeling were assessed in 55
women (27 placebo and 28 risedronate).8
Transiliac bone biopsies were obtained at
baseline and after treatment. The biopsy
samples showed no undesirable qualitative
changes, such as osteo-malacia, peritrabecular
fibrosis, or woven bone, associated
with treatment.
The effects of alendronate on bone quality
and turnover were also studied in secondary
osteoporosis.9 This study included 52
women and 36 men aged 22-75 years who
had long-term glucocorticoid exposure. Patients
were randomized to receive placebo
or oral alendronate 2.5, 5, or 10 mg/day
for one year. Transiliac bone biopsies were
then obtained for quantitative and qualitative
analysis of bone. In addition to the anticipated
decrease in bone turnover, the investigators
found that alendronate treatment
was not associated with any qualitative
abnormalities. There were no differences
between the placebo and alendronate groups
in trabecular bone volume or parameters of
microarchitecture.
Parathyroid hormone (PTH) is a bone-formation
stimulating agent; it not only
increases bone mass, but also seems to
restore bone architecture by filling in cavities
and cancellous bone. The effects of
recombinant parathyroid hormone on bone
quality differ with duration of treatment. A
study of short-term PTH use (56 days) was
conducted in 2-year-old male rats treated
with daily injections of 15 nmol/kg PTH or
vehicle.10 Rats treated with PTH showed a
substantial increase in the strength of the
vertebral body compared with those treated
with vehicle. Furthermore, a biomechanical
analysis showed that compressive bone
strength was enhanced, even
after correcting for increased
bone mass. This suggests that
PTH improved bone quality
as well as mass.
Another animal study suggested that longterm
treatment with PTH may have deleterious
effects on bone quality.11 Young
female rats received near-lifetime treatment
with recombinant PTH at doses of 5, 30, or
75 µg/kg/day or vehicle controls for up to
two years as part of an oncogenicity evaluation.
Substantially increased bone mass
was observed for all treatment groups.
However, PTH stimulated osteoblasts and
skeletal growth throughout the treatment
duration, resulting in abnormal bone architecture
and undesirable biomechanical
properties. In particular, there was an
absence of distinction between trabecular
and cortical bone, and the femoral midshaft
showed reduced toughness and increased
brittleness. The investigators concluded that
PTH skeletal effects are a complex function
of dose and duration and that, in rats, short-term
treatment (six months or less) is more
advantageous than near-lifetime treatment.
Dempster et al examined the effect of daily
treatment with recombinant PTH on bone
microarchitecture and turn-over in patients
with osteoporosis.12 They obtained paired
iliac crest bone biopsy specimens from
patients with osteoporosis before and after
treatment with daily injections of 400 U of
recombinant PTH. The first group of eight
men was treated with PTH for 18 months.
The second group of eight postmenopausal
women was treated with PTH for 36
months. The women were maintained on
hormone replacement therapy for the duration
of the trial. Results showed that cancellous
bone area was maintained in both
groups, while cortical width was maintained
in men and significantly increased in
women. There was no increase in cortical
porosity. There was also an increase in trabecular
connectivity density in the majority
of patients. The investigators concluded that
daily PTH has an anabolic effect on cortical
bone in patients with osteoporosis and also
improves cancellous bone microarchitecture.
Arzoxifene, a new selective estrogen-receptor
modulator (SERM), has also been shown
to maintain bone quality as well as BMD.
The effects of arzoxifene 0.1 mg/day and
0.5 mg/day were examined in four-monthold
ovariectomized rats and compared with
controls.13 Both doses of arzoxifene prevented
ovariectomy-induced declines in
BMD. They also maintained bone formation
indices and preserved trabecular number
above controls. Compression testing and
three-point bending testing of the femoral
shaft confirmed that bone strength and
toughness were higher for treated animals.
Fluoride may also have beneficial effects on
bone quality.14 When prescribed for the prevention
of osteoporosis, fluoride modifies
the microscopic structure and biomechanical
properties of bone. It stimulates bone formation,
leading to trabecular hypertrophy
and possibly improving interconnections
within the trabecular network. However,
when the concentration of fluoride in bone
becomes excessive, it can lead to mineralization
defects; these weaken the bone despite
an increase in mass. Thus the benefits of
fluoride in preventing vertebral fractures are
probably the result of a balance between
increases in trabecular bone mass and alterations
in bone mineralization.14
The future: practical
clinical techniques for measuring
bone quality
Once the characteristics that determine
bone quality are established, it will be
desirable to develop scales for measuring
and quantifying bone quality. These may
ultimately prove useful for diagnosis,
selecting appropriate osteoporosis therapy,
and assessing the results of treatment.3,15-17
The next step will be the development of
practical, noninvasive techniques for assessing
bone quality. Although there are several
effective techniques for measuring the
quality of resected bone, such as multiple
spin echos,17 noninvasive techniques for
assessing bone microarchitecture have not
yet been perfected.3 In a study published in
1999, Matsubara et al experimented with
such a technique, using a morphological
filter and pipeline analysis applied to computed
radiography (CR).18 On the basis of
trabecular thickness, they divided observed
trabecular patterns into eight subsets. They
subsequently developed criteria relating the
percentage of thicker trabeculae to the
strength of the bone. They were then able
to correlate an abstracted percentage of
thick trabeculae observed by CR to bone
strength. By contrast, BMD alone correlated
poorly to bone strength.
In summary, our conception of osteoporosis
as a disease of low bone mass has
moved toward a broader understanding
that bone strength is based on both bone
quantity and quality.19 A 1991 consensus
conference developed a new definition of
osteoporosis as a disease characterized by
"low bone mass and microarchitectural
deterioration." 20 Current techniques for
assessing microarchitectural deterioration
are limited by their invasiveness. In the
future, the diagnosis of osteoporosis will
probably involve more accurate assessments
of bone strength using noninvasive methods
to measure both bone mineral density and
its architectural integrity.19
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- Chavassieux PM, Arlot ME, Roux JP, et al. Effects
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- Ejersted C, Andreassen TT, Hauge EM, et al. Parathyroid
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- Sato M, Vahle J, Schmidt A, et al. Abnormal bone
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- Dempster DW, Cosman F, Kurland ES, et al. Effects of
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- Ma YL, Bryant HU, Zeng Q, et al. Long-term dosing of
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- Consensus Development Conference. Prophylaxis and
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