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  • Title: Alendronate stimulation of nocturnal parathyroid hormone secretion: a mechanism to explain the continued improvement in bone mineral density accompanying alendronate therapy.
    Author: Greenspan SL, Holland S, Maitland-Ramsey L, Poku M, Freeman A, Yuan W, Kher U, Gertz B.
    Journal: Proc Assoc Am Physicians; 1996 May; 108(3):230-8. PubMed ID: 8774056.
    Abstract:
    The major effect of currently available antiresorptive therapy for osteoporosis is to slow or arrest bone loss. Although antiresorptive therapies demonstrate increases in bone mineral density, the effect is usually transient, and a plateau in bone mineral density usually emerges at 1 year. A unique and unexplained feature of treatment with the antiresorptive agent alendronate is continued, and steady improvement in bone mineral density occurs in years 2 and 3. We postulated that a potential mechanism for this unanticipated effect might be an exaggerated nocturnal increase in parathyroid hormone (PTH), which can act as an anabolic agent. We examined day-night levels and diurnal variation of PTH, serum calcium, ionized calcium, and markers of bone formation (osteocalcin) and resorption (N-telopeptide cross-links) over 24 hours in a randomly selected subset of 38 women (placebo: N = 13; mean age +/- SD, 69 +/- 3 years; alendronate: N = 25; mean age +/- SD, 69 +/- 3 years) who had completed 12 to 15 months of a larger (N = 120), randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial with alendronate, 5 mg/day. By month 12, increases in the bone density of the spine (4.6%) and femoral neck (2.7%) were observed in the group treated with alendronate compared with placebo, (spine, 2.2%, p = .05; femoral neck, -0.2%, p < or = .05). Mean nocturnal PTH (10 PM-8 AM) was 21% higher (39 versus 32 pg/ml), and nocturnal serum calcium averaged 3% lower (8.7 versus 9.0 mg/dL) in the alendronate-versus-placebo group (both p < or = .05). Daytime levels (8 AM-10 PM) of PTH did not differ significantly between groups. We observed accompanying decreases in coupled markers of bone formation (osteocalcin, 38% lower, p < or = .01) and resorption (N-telopeptide cross-links, 50% lower, p < or = .01) in the alendronate group. Significant diurnal variations of PTH, serum calcium, and osteocalcin were present in both groups. We conclude that following 1 year of alendronate therapy, women have significant increases in bone mineral density and in nocturnal PTH levels, associated with decreases in nocturnal serum calcium and markers of bone turnover with maintenance of the diurnal variation. The nocturnal increase in PTH may mimic the anabolic effect of low-dose intermittent PTH administration to stimulate bone formation. Therefore, the increase might be a potential mechanism to explain the continued improvement in bone density following more than 1 year of alendronate therapy.
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