Conference Coverage

Preferred osteoporosis treatment order with teriparatide, denosumab reaffirmed


 

AT ASBMR

DENVER – A treatment regimen for postmenopausal women with osteoporosis that started with teriparatide (TPTD) for 2 years and switched to denosumab (DMAB) improved their spine trabecular microarchitecture – a predictor of fracture risk independent of areal bone mineral density – in a new analysis of the DATA trial and its extension study, DATA-Switch.

Dr. Joy Tsai of Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston

Dr. Joy Tsai

The conclusions are drawn from the 2-year DATA study (J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2014;99[5];1694-1700), which also showed that the combination of teriparatide and denosumab outperformed either drug alone, and the cumulative 4-year outcomes from its extension study, DATA-Switch (Lancet. 2015 Dec 19. 386[9999]:1147-55).

“Our take-home is that for patients who are at extremely high risk of fracture, combination strategy is a treatment strategy to be considered,” said Dr. Tsai, who presented the results of the study at the meeting.

The findings also reinforce the general strategy of treating with anabolic therapy followed by an antiresorptive agent, rather than the other way around.

Specifically, “we would caution against the use of teriparatide immediately following denosumab because of this transient decrease in bone density that correlates with high bone turnover,” Dr. Tsai said.

The DATA and DATA-Switch studies randomized 94 postmenopausal women with osteoporosis to 2 years of TPTD (20 mcg/day), DMAB (60 mg every 6 months), or both drugs for 2 years. In DATA-Switch, women who received TPTD in the first 2 years were switched to DMAB, and those receiving DMAB were switched to TPTD. Women in the combination group were switched to DMAB only.

The researchers used dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) spine scans to assess spine trabecular microarchitecture by calculating trabecular bone score (TBS) at 0, 12, 24, 30, 36, and 48 months.

After 2 years, TPTD alone was associated with a 2.7% increase in TBS over baseline (P = .009), while DMAB alone was associated with a 1.8% increase (P = .118 vs. baseline). Combination treatment led to a 4.5% increase (P = .017 vs. baseline).

In the 6 months after the treatment switch at year 2, the researchers noted increases in TBS in the combination-to-DMAB group (2.1%) and the TPTD-to-DMAB group (2.0%), but the DMAB-to-TPTD group experienced a decrease of 1.1% over months 24-30 (P less than .05 compared with other groups).

The decrease in TBS was temporary: At 48 months, all groups had an overall increase in TBS (TPTD-to-DMAB group, 5.1%; DMAB-to-TPTD group, 3.6%; combination-to-DMAB group, 6.1%). There were no significant differences between the groups.

From baseline to month 48, the percentage of patients considered to be at high risk of fracture based on TBS score (1.23 or less) dropped from 24% to 8% in the TPTD-to-DMAB group, from 18% to 14% in the DMAB-to-TPTD group, and from 39% to 11% in the combination-to-DMAB group.

“Ultimately, at the 4-year mark all three groups increased trabecular bone scores, so it also supports our rationale to consider the use of these treatment strategies, specifically the ones when you’re switching to or continuing denosumab,” Dr. Tsai said.

Amgen and Eli Lilly funded the study. Dr. Tsai reported having no financial disclosures.

Recommended Reading

Romosozumab cuts new vertebral fracture risk by 73%, but safety data are concerning
MDedge Family Medicine
In Sweden, very few osteoporotic fractures prompt treatment within 12 months
MDedge Family Medicine
Meta-analysis: Bisphosphonates mitigate glucocorticoid-induced bone loss
MDedge Family Medicine
Anabolic agents for osteoporosis have limited role so far
MDedge Family Medicine
How to rule out secondary causes of osteoporosis
MDedge Family Medicine
Worsening osteoporosis care for RA patients shows need for action
MDedge Family Medicine
Study finds low risk for jaw osteonecrosis with denosumab for postmenopausal osteoporosis
MDedge Family Medicine
Reduced fracture risk maintained in abaloparatide extension study
MDedge Family Medicine
Incidental hip CT scans could serve as osteoporosis screen
MDedge Family Medicine
PBC linked to increased risk of bone fracture
MDedge Family Medicine