Refereed journal article or data article (A1)

Urinary osteocalcin and other markers of bone metabolism: the effect of risedronate therapy




List of AuthorsKumm J, Ivaska KK, Rohtla K, Vaananena K, Tamm A

PublisherINFORMA HEALTHCARE

Publication year2008

JournalScandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation

Journal name in sourceSCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL & LABORATORY INVESTIGATION

Journal acronymSCAND J CLIN LAB INV

Volume number68

Issue number6

Start page459

End page463

Number of pages5

ISSN0036-5513

DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00365510701832237


Abstract
Objective. Serum osteocalcin (S-OC) is widely used as an index of bone formation. However, there is evidence that some urinary fragments of OC reflect resorption and might be useful in monitoring antiresorptive therapy. Here, we report 6-month changes in urinary midfragments of osteocalcin (U-MidOC) and other bone turnover markers in response to risedronate treatment. Material and methods. The study group comprised 19 patients with postmenopausal osteoporosis, aged 49-66 years, and receiving risedronate therapy. Fifty-four premenopausal women served as controls. Osteoporosis was diagnosed by lumbal bone mineral density (BMD). Urinary osteocalcin was measured by the U-MidOC assay for midfragments. Bone formation was assessed by S-PINP and S-OC, and resorption by S-CTx-I. Results. At baseline, U-MidOC was significantly correlated only with S-OC. After the 1st month of therapy, a similar decrease was observed in the values of U-MidOC and S-CTx-I, but in formation markers S-P1NP and S-OC only after three months. The rapid decrease in U-MidOC, analogous to S-CTX-I, and the different kinetics for urinary and serum OC suggest that urinary OC midfragments are more associated with resorption than S-OC. An association was also observed between the 1-month change in U-MidOC and 12-month gain in lumbar BMD. The response in U-MidOC after only the 1st month of therapy makes it a potential marker for monitoring the effect of risedronate, presumably reflecting different aspects of bone resorption than S-CTx-I does.


Last updated on 2021-24-06 at 09:16