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Abaloparatide is more potent than teriparatide in restoring bone mass and strength in type 1 diabetic male mice.

Authors :
Marino, Silvia
Ozgurel, Serra Ucer
McAndrews, Kevin
Cregor, Meloney
Villaseñor, Alma
Mamani-Huanca, Maricuz
Barbas, Coral
Gortazar, Arancha
Sato, Amy Y.
Bellido, Teresita
Source :
BONE. Apr2024, Vol. 181, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

This study investigated the efficacy of the two FDA-approved bone anabolic ligands of the parathyroid hormone receptor 1 (PTH1R), teriparatide or human parathyroid hormone 1–34 (PTH) and abaloparatide (ABL), to restoring skeletal health using a preclinical murine model of streptozotocin-induced T1-DM. Intermittent daily subcutaneous injections of equal molar doses (12 pmoles/g/day) of PTH (50 ng/g/day), ABL (47.5 ng/g/day), or vehicle, were administered for 28 days to 5-month-old C57Bl/6 J male mice with established T1-DM or control (C) mice. ABL was superior to PTH in increasing or restoring bone mass in control or T1-MD mice, respectively, which was associated with superior stimulation of trabecular and periosteal bone formation, upregulation of osteoclastic/osteoblastic gene expression, and increased circulating bone remodeling markers. Only ABL corrected the reduction in ultimate load, which is a measure of bone strength, induced by T1-DM, and it also increased energy to ultimate load. In addition, bones from T1-DM mice treated with PTH or ABL exhibited increased ultimate stress, a material index, compared to T1-DM mice administered with vehicle. And both PTH and ABL prevented the increased expression of the Wnt antagonist Sost/sclerostin displayed by T1-DM mice. Further, PTH and ABL increased to a similar extent the circulating bone resorption marker CTX and the bone formation marker P1NP in T1-DM after 2 weeks of treatment; however, only ABL sustained these increases after 4 weeks of treatment. We conclude that at equal molar doses, ABL is more effective than PTH in increasing bone mass and restoring the cortical and trabecular bone lost with T1-DM, due to higher and longer-lasting increases in bone remodeling. • Bone fragility associated with diabetes causes substantial morbidity and mortality. • Data regarding the efficacy of anabolic therapies in T1-DM patients are scarce. • T1-DM bone disease is characterized by a marked decrease in bone formation. • Standard of care with antiresorptives stops bone loss but does not increase bone formation. • PTH1R activation rebuilds bone, improves structure, and restores strength in T1-DM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
87563282
Volume :
181
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
BONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175793208
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bone.2024.117042