Bisphosphonate Action on the Appendicular Skeleton: Evidence for Differential Effects

NCT ID: NCT00666627

Last Updated: 2018-03-06

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

PHASE2

Total Enrollment

410 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2007-04-30

Study Completion Date

2014-12-31

Brief Summary

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A study to determine if the three licensed bisphosphonates (alendronate, ibandronate and risedronate):a) affect the peripheral skeleton differently, as assessed by quantitative ultrasound of bone (QUS), peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT) and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA)? b) have different effects on bone cells and their activity as assessed by flow cytometry and biochemical markers of bone cell activity? The aim of the study is to compare the effects of three licensed bisphosphonates on bone quantity and quality. There has been no such study before. Most of the measures of bone quantity and quality used in this protocol have not been studied with any of these three agents. The novelty of the study necessitates the establishment of reference ranges and this explains the need for the inclusion of a group of young women.

Detailed Description

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There have been a number of randomised controlled trials examining the effect of bisphosphonates on fracture risk. The results of these trials have not been uniform, especially in relation to non-vertebral fractures. We have proposed that much of the fracture risk reduction with risedronate can be explained by the reduction in bone resorption markers (Eastell et al, 2003). Each of these three bisphosphonates reduces bone resorption markers, and alendronate and ibandronate are at least as effective as risedronate in this regard. However, there have been few direct comparisons of the different bisphosphonates on surrogate endpoints such as bone mineral density and bone turnover markers. This raises the question of whether the bisphosphonates might affect some other aspect of bone strength, such as 'bone quality'.

The purpose the study is to determine whether three licensed bisphosphonates affect the skeleton differently using a variety of methods (various bone densitometry devices and ultrasound measurements of the bone) at a variety of bone sites (spine, hip, fingers, heel, forearm and leg). These changes will be compared to changes in other markers of bone health such as biochemical markers of bone turnover to help us determine the possible mechanism of action for the different treatments. The study will last for 48 weeks which should be long enough to detect signfiicant changes on bone strength as measured by DXA at the spine/hip. As we are interested in how these changes occur there are more visits in the first three months of the study than the last 9 months of the study. This is expected to help us detect the difference between the onset of the effects of the three treatments more clearly.

Study vists will be: screening, baseline 1, baseline 2, 1 week, 2 weeks, 4 weeks, 12 weeks, 13 weeks (phone calls to participants at 24 and 36 weeks), 48 weeks and 49 weeks. The two baseline visits will allow duplicate measurements of bone stregth/quality on different occasions at the start of the study to minimise variability. Treatment will begin at baseline 2 (0 days) and last for 48 weeks. The visits at 13 weeks and 49 weeks are to perform bone density/quality tests in duplicate to minimise variability as at baseline visit.

Bone mineral density of various bones (hip/spine/whole body and forearm) will be measured by DXA on various devices, quantitative ultrasound will be performed at the heel and fingers, and bone quality will be measured by pQCT at the forearm and tibia/3D analysis of the hip scans at the baseline visits, at 12 and 13 weeks and at 48 and 49 week visits Surrogate markers of bone health (biochemical markers of bone turnover) will be measured at baseline, 1, 2 4, 12, 13, 48 and 49 weeks. Exploratory methods included in the protocol include: Assessing the number of bone breaking down cell numbers (osteoclasts) at baseline, 1 week and 48 weeks Assessing nail brittleness at baseline 12 and 48 weeks.

Subjects will be randomised using a stratification method to ensure all groups have an equal range of bone strength at study entry. Randomisation will be performed by the hospital pharmacy. The study is not blinded and subjects will know which treatment they are on. Subjects will be asked not to discuss their assigned treatment with staff performing bone measurements. There is no placebo group in this trial as all subjects will taking one of the three treatments. We have chosen the active comparator design as many of the measurements (especially the biochemical and cellular ones) do not change unless treatment is given; also, these treatments are indicated and effective in this patients group.

To generate control data we will recruit a group of 200 healthy young women aged 35-40 years. The control group will undertake all the measurements of bone strength/quality that the treatment group will have as well as the biochemical maerkers of bone turnover. There will be only 2 study visits for the control group,baseline and 48 weeks. This data will serve as internal controls and as reference ranges for each of the devices used in the study. Ethical considerations for this study include the use of ionising radiation, blood sampling at each study visit and the number of study visits. This may be balanced by the close monitoring of the subject whilst on the study and a thorough assessment of bone health for 49 weeks. Research participants, patient groups or communities were not involved in the design of this research study.

The hypothesis of the study is that bisphosphonates have varying magnitude of effect on non-vertebral fractures and this is reflected in different changes in measures of bone quality (QUS), bone density in the appendicular skeleton (DXA and pQCT) and novel biochemical markers of bone resorption and osteoclast precursors.

Conditions

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Post-menopausal Osteoporosis

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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1

Ibandronate

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Ibandronate

Intervention Type DRUG

once monthly

2

Risedronate

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Risedronate

Intervention Type DRUG

Risedronate 35mg once weekly

3

Alendronate 70mg once weekly

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Alendronate

Intervention Type DRUG

Alendronate 70mg once weekly

4

Young women control group

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Interventions

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Ibandronate

once monthly

Intervention Type DRUG

Risedronate

Risedronate 35mg once weekly

Intervention Type DRUG

Alendronate

Alendronate 70mg once weekly

Intervention Type DRUG

Other Intervention Names

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Bonviva Actonel Fosamax

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* be female
* at least 5 years post menopausal but \<85 years
* BMD T-score (at the lumbar spine or total hip) of less than or equal to

* 2.5, or T-score less than or equal to -1 with a low trauma fracture.
* be ambulatory
* be able and willing to participate in the study and provide written informed consent

Exclusion Criteria

* have evidence of a clinically significant organic disease which could prevent the patient from completing the study
* have a BMI less than 18 or greater than 35
* abuse alcohol or use illicit drugs or who consumed more than 4 servings of any alcoholic beverage one day prior to the visit (i.e., subjects who might be binge drinkers)
* have any history of cancer within the past 5 years excluding skin cancer non melanomas
* have a history of ongoing conditions or diseases known to cause abnormalities of calcium metabolism or skeletal health (secondary osteoporosis)
* Chronic renal disease (as defined by a creatinine clearance of ≤ 30ml/min)
* Acute or chronic hepatic disease
* Malabsorption syndromes
* Hyperthyroidism as manifested by TSH outside the lower limit of the normal range
* Hyperparathyroidism
* Hypocalcemia or hypercalcemia
* Osteomalacia
* Cushing's syndrome
* Patient who are currently on glucocorticoid therapy
* have a serum calcium less than 2.2 mmol/l and a PTH above 75ng/l
* have a history of any known condition that would interfere with the assessment of DXA at either lumbar spine or femoral neck
* have markedly abnormal clinical laboratory parameters that are assessed as clinically significant by the investigator
* use any of the following medications within 12 months of starting study drug

* Bisphosphonates (at any dose)
* Use of any fluoride with the exception use for oral hygiene
* Strontium
* Other bone agents (i.e., SERM, isoflavones, HRT etc)
* have participated in another clinical trial involving active therapy 3 months prior to randomisation
* have a history of allergic reaction to bisphosphonates
* patient taking calcium supplements within the last month prior to randomisation
* We will exclude patients with secondary osteoporosis, those who have been on anti-resorptive treatments in the past year, and women less than 5 years since menopause, and those with bilateral fractures in the measurement regions (heel, hip and forearm).
* Have suffered a recent fracture within the last 12 months
Minimum Eligible Age

35 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

85 Years

Eligible Sex

FEMALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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Procter and Gamble

INDUSTRY

Sponsor Role collaborator

University of Sheffield

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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University of Sheffield

Principal Investigators

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Eugene McCloskey, Dr

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

University of Sheffield

Rosemary Hannon, Dr

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

University of Sheffield

Angela Rogers, Dr

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

University of Sheffield

Margaret Paggiosi, Dr

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

University of Sheffield

Locations

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Academic Unit of Bone Metabolism (Sheffield)

Sheffield, South Yorkshire, United Kingdom

Site Status

Countries

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United Kingdom

Other Identifiers

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STH 14463

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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