Birch Robyn, Eltit Felipe, Xie Dennis, Wang Qiong, Dea Nicolas, Fisher Charles G, Cox Michael E, Ng Tony, Charest-Morin Raphaële, Wang Rizhi
School of Biomedical Engineering, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z3, Canada.
Centre for Aging SMART, Vancouver, BC V5Z 1M9, Canada.
JBMR Plus. 2025 Apr 23;9(6):ziaf063. doi: 10.1093/jbmrpl/ziaf063. eCollection 2025 Jun.
Giant cell tumors of bone (GCTB) are rare but aggressive, locally destructive tumors. They typically affect young people, significantly reducing their quality of life and increasing mortality rates. Giant cell tumors of bone are composed of osteoclast-like giant cells that respond to increased secretion of RANKL by stromal cells, triggering osteolysis. For over a decade, denosumab, a monoclonal antibody targeting this receptor activator, has been approved as a neo-adjuvant to facilitate surgical resection or in the setting of inoperable tumors. Denosumab treatment has shown rapid pain improvement and tumor size reduction in the spine. Although variable degrees of tumor mineralization have been observed in clinical applications of this drug, the nature of this newly formed mineralized tissue has yet to be determined. To characterize both mineralization and collagen organization in the newly formed bone, we conducted extensive analyses on 4 posttreatment giant cell tumor vertebral samples, involving quantitative backscattered imaging, electron probe microanalysis, and a novel method for determining the alignment of collagen fibrils using second harmonic generation. Additionally, biological mechanisms involved in bone mineralization and matrix formation were analyzed using histological staining and mass spectroscopy. Our results concluded that denosumab treatment after giant cell tumor of bone in the spine was associated with the formation of woven bone and increased mineral density in a matrix of disorganized collagen fibers characterized by increased collagen III content, with the response appearing to depend on patient age and extension of treatment. To our knowledge, this is the first comprehensive material-based study on the bone formed during denosumab treatment for GCTB, providing valuable information on how denosumab affects bone quality and how the reported methodology can be applied to similar studies.
骨巨细胞瘤(GCTB)虽罕见,但具有侵袭性,是局部破坏性肿瘤。它们通常影响年轻人,显著降低其生活质量并增加死亡率。骨巨细胞瘤由破骨细胞样巨细胞组成,这些巨细胞对基质细胞分泌的核因子κB受体活化因子配体(RANKL)增加作出反应,引发骨溶解。十多年来,地诺单抗,一种靶向该受体激活剂的单克隆抗体,已被批准作为新辅助药物以促进手术切除或用于不可切除肿瘤的治疗。地诺单抗治疗已显示出能使脊柱疼痛迅速改善且肿瘤大小缩小。尽管在该药物的临床应用中已观察到不同程度的肿瘤矿化,但这种新形成的矿化组织的性质尚未确定。为了表征新形成骨中的矿化和胶原组织,我们对4个治疗后的骨巨细胞瘤椎体样本进行了广泛分析,包括定量背散射成像、电子探针微分析以及一种使用二次谐波产生来确定胶原纤维排列的新方法。此外,还使用组织学染色和质谱分析了参与骨矿化和基质形成的生物学机制。我们的结果表明,脊柱骨巨细胞瘤患者接受地诺单抗治疗后,与编织骨的形成以及在以III型胶原含量增加为特征的无序胶原纤维基质中矿物质密度增加有关,其反应似乎取决于患者年龄和治疗时长。据我们所知,这是第一项关于地诺单抗治疗骨巨细胞瘤期间形成的骨的全面的基于材料的研究,为地诺单抗如何影响骨质量以及所报道的方法如何应用于类似研究提供了有价值的信息。