University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Colorado Center for Bone Research, Lakewood, 80227, USA.
Bone. 2011 Jul;49(1):77-81. doi: 10.1016/j.bone.2010.12.024. Epub 2011 Jan 11.
Bisphosphonates are eliminated from the human body by the kidney. Renal clearance is both by glomerular filtration and proximal tubular secretion. Bisphosphonates given rapidly in high doses in animal models have induced a variety of adverse renal effects, from glomerular sclerosis to acute tubular necrosis. Nevertheless in the doses that are registered for the management of postmenopausal osteoporosis (PMO), oral bisphosphonates have never been shown to adversely affect the kidney, even (in post-hoc analysis of clinical trial data) down to estimated glomerular filtration rates of 15 ml/min. In addition fracture risk reduction has also been observed in these populations with stage 4 chronic kidney disease (CKD) with age-related reductions in glomerular filtration rate (GFR). Intravenous zoledronic acid is safe when the infusion rate is no faster than 15 min though there have been short-term (days 9-11 post-infusion) increases in serum creatinine concentrations in a small sub-set of patients from the postmenopausal registration trials. For these reasons intravenous zoledronic acid should be avoided in patients with GFR levels <35 ml/min; and the patients should be well hydrated and have avoided the concomitant use of any agent that may impair renal function. Intravenous ibandronate has not to date been reported to induce acute changes in serum creatinine concentrations in the PMO clinical trial data, but the lack of head-to-head comparative data between ibandronate and zoledronic acid precludes knowing if one intravenous bisphosphonate is safer than the other. In patients with GFR levels <30-35 ml/min, the correct diagnosis of osteoporosis becomes more complex since other forms of renal bone disease, which require different management strategies than osteoporosis, need to be excluded before the assumption can be made that fractures and/or low bone mass are due to osteoporosis. In addition, in patients who may have pre-existing adynamic renal bone disease, there is a lack of evidence of any beneficial effect or harm by reducing bone turnover by any pharmacological agent, including bisphosphonates on bone strength or vascular calcification. Bisphosphonates are safe and effective for the management of osteoporosis when used in the right dose and in the right patient population for the right duration.
双膦酸盐通过肾脏从人体中排出。肾清除率既通过肾小球滤过,也通过近端肾小管分泌。在动物模型中,快速给予大剂量的双膦酸盐会引起各种不良的肾脏效应,从肾小球硬化到急性肾小管坏死。然而,在用于治疗绝经后骨质疏松症(PMO)的剂量下,口服双膦酸盐从未被证明对肾脏有不良影响,即使(在临床试验数据的事后分析中)肾小球滤过率降至 15ml/min 以下。此外,在这些年龄相关性肾小球滤过率(GFR)降低的 4 期慢性肾脏病(CKD)人群中,骨折风险也得到了降低。静脉唑来膦酸输注速度不超过 15 分钟是安全的,尽管在绝经后注册试验的一小部分患者中,在短期(输注后 9-11 天)内血清肌酐浓度会升高。出于这些原因,对于 GFR 水平<35ml/min 的患者,应避免使用静脉唑来膦酸;并且患者应保持充足的水分,并避免同时使用任何可能损害肾功能的药物。迄今为止,在 PMO 临床试验数据中,静脉伊班膦酸盐尚未报告引起血清肌酐浓度的急性变化,但由于伊班膦酸盐和唑来膦酸之间缺乏头对头的比较数据,因此无法确定一种静脉双膦酸盐是否比另一种更安全。对于 GFR 水平<30-35ml/min 的患者,由于需要排除其他形式的肾性骨病(需要与骨质疏松症不同的管理策略),骨质疏松症的正确诊断变得更加复杂,这些其他形式的肾性骨病需要排除在外,才能假设骨折和/或低骨量是由于骨质疏松症引起的。此外,对于可能患有先前存在的动力性肾性骨病的患者,缺乏任何有说服力的证据表明通过任何药物(包括双膦酸盐)降低骨转换对骨强度或血管钙化有任何有益或有害影响。当以正确的剂量、在正确的患者人群中、在正确的时间内使用时,双膦酸盐是安全有效的骨质疏松症治疗药物。