Romas Evange, Gillespie Matthew T
The University of Melbourne, St. Vincent's Hospital, 41 Victoria Parade, Fitzroy, 3065, Australia.
Rheum Dis Clin North Am. 2006 Nov;32(4):759-73. doi: 10.1016/j.rdc.2006.07.004.
Inflammatory synovitis induces profound bone loss and OCLs are the instrument of this destruction. TNF blockers have an established role in the prevention of inflammatory bone loss in RA; however, not all patients respond to anti-TNF therapy and side effects may prevent long-term treatment in others. The B-cell--depleting antibody rituximab and the T-cell costimulation blocker abatacept are emerging as major treatment options for patients who are resistant to anti-TNF [96,97]. Proof-of-concept studies demonstrate that targeting RANK-mediated osteoclastogenesis prevents inflammatory bone loss and clinical application has only just begun. The efficacy of RANKL inhibition has been witnessed in trials of Denosumab, and RANKL-neutralizing antibodies are likely to become the treatment of choice for blocking RANKL in RA [77,78]. A major limitation of RANKL antagonism is that it does not treat synovitis. Therefore, anti-RANKL therapy most likely will be used in the context of MTX therapy. There is uncertainty about the possible extraskeletal adverse effects of long-term effects of long-term RANKL blockade. In particular, anti-RANKL therapy could jeopardize dendritic cell function or survival. The demonstrable role of OCLs in inflammation-induced bone loss also invites a reconsideration of the new BPs for bone protection [98]. Studies of ZA in preclinical models indicate that bone protection is comparable to that afforded by OPG. One possible caveat is that intravenous BPs are linked to jaw osteonecrosis [99], although the incidence is confined mainly to intensive treatment in the oncology setting. Although pulsed PTH stimulated bone formation in arthritic models, it has yet to be proven clinically in the context of powerful OCL inhibition with TNF or RANKL antagonists. With strategies that normalize OCL numbers, clinicians are poised to accomplish effective prevention of inflammation-induced bone loss.
炎性滑膜炎可导致严重的骨质流失,破骨细胞是这种破坏的媒介。肿瘤坏死因子(TNF)阻滞剂在预防类风湿关节炎(RA)的炎性骨质流失方面已确立了作用;然而,并非所有患者对抗TNF治疗都有反应,且副作用可能会妨碍其他患者的长期治疗。对于对抗TNF耐药的患者,B细胞耗竭抗体利妥昔单抗和T细胞共刺激阻滞剂阿巴西普正成为主要的治疗选择[96,97]。概念验证研究表明,靶向RANK介导的破骨细胞生成可预防炎性骨质流失,且临床应用才刚刚开始。在狄诺塞麦的试验中已见证了RANKL抑制的疗效,RANKL中和抗体很可能会成为RA中阻断RANKL的首选治疗方法[77,78]。RANKL拮抗作用的一个主要局限是它不能治疗滑膜炎。因此,抗RANKL治疗很可能会在甲氨蝶呤(MTX)治疗的背景下使用。长期RANKL阻断的长期影响可能产生的骨骼外不良反应尚不确定。特别是,抗RANKL治疗可能会危及树突状细胞的功能或存活。破骨细胞在炎症诱导的骨质流失中的明确作用也促使人们重新考虑用于骨骼保护的新型双膦酸盐类药物[98]。在临床前模型中对唑来膦酸(ZA)的研究表明,其骨骼保护作用与骨保护素(OPG)相当。一个可能需要注意的问题是,静脉注射双膦酸盐类药物与颌骨坏死有关[99],尽管发病率主要局限于肿瘤学环境中的强化治疗。虽然脉冲式甲状旁腺激素(PTH)在关节炎模型中刺激了骨形成,但在使用TNF或RANKL拮抗剂强力抑制破骨细胞的情况下,其临床疗效尚未得到证实。通过使破骨细胞数量正常化的策略,临床医生有望有效预防炎症诱导性骨质流失。