a Department of Biochemistry, Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, Australia
b WHO Collaborating Centre for Metabolic Bone Diseases, Department of Human Metabolism & Clinical Biochemistry, University of Sheffield Medical School, Sheffield, UK
Abstract:
We studied the effects of alendronate (amino-hydroxybutylidene bisphosphonate) on biochemical indices of bone turnover and on lumbar spinal bone mineral density in 15 postmenopausal women with vertebral osteoporosis. Alendronate 7.5 mg daily was administered intravenously as a slow infusion for four consecutive days. Treatment was associated with a significant decrease in serum calcium (p < 0.01), fasting urinary calcium excretion (p < 0.01) and hydroxyproline excretion within several days followed a later decrease in serum alkaline phosphatase activity that showed a significant reduction at two months after treatment (p < 0.05). Serum calcium reverted to pretreatment values by the second week after infusion, but the decrease in alkaline phosphatase, urinary calcium, and hydroxyproline excretion persisted to six months after infusion. There was a 3% mean increase in lumbar bone mineral density at six months (p < 0.01). A transient lymphopenia or leucopenia was noted in eight patients and a short-lived fever in six. No other side effects were observed. This study demonstrates that short-term exposure to high intravenous doses of alendronate induces suppression of bone resorption in osteoporosis that persists for at least 6 months after infusion. We conclude that a short exposure to high intravenous doses induces sustained effects on bone turnover in much the same manner as that observed in Paget's disease of bone.