Temporal patterns of osteoclast formation and activity following withdrawal of RANKL inhibition

Author:

Kim Albert S12345,Taylor Victoria E1,Castro-Martinez Ariel1,Dhakal Suraj1,Zamerli Amjad1,Mohanty Sindhu1,Xiao Ya1,Simic Marija K16,Wen Jinchen7,Chai Ryan123ORCID,Croucher Peter I123,Center Jacqueline R123,Girgis Christian M45,McDonald Michelle M1235

Affiliation:

1. Skeletal Diseases Program, Garvan Institute of Medical Research , Sydney, NSW, 2010 , Australia

2. Faculty of Medicine , St Vincent’s Clinical School, , Sydney, NSW, 2010 , Australia

3. UNSW Sydney , St Vincent’s Clinical School, , Sydney, NSW, 2010 , Australia

4. Department of Diabetes and Endocrinology, Westmead Hospital , Sydney, NSW, 2145 , Australia

5. Faculty of Health and Medicine, University of Sydney , Sydney, NSW, 2050 , Australia

6. Department of Pathology, New York University Grossman School of Medicine , New York, NY, 10016 , United States

7. Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University , Durham, NC, 27708 , United States

Abstract

Abstract Rebound bone loss following denosumab discontinuation is an important clinical challenge. Current treatment strategies to prevent this fail to suppress the rise and overshoot in osteoclast-mediated bone resorption. In this study, we use a murine model of denosumab treatment and discontinuation to show the temporal changes in osteoclast formation and activity during RANKL inhibition and withdrawal. We show that the cellular processes that drive the formation of osteoclasts and subsequent bone resorption following withdrawal of RANKL inhibition precede the rebound bone loss. Furthermore, a rise in serum TRAP and RANKL levels is detected before markers of bone turnover used in current clinical practice. These mechanistic advances may provide insight into a more defined window of opportunity to intervene with sequential therapy following denosumab discontinuation.

Funder

UNSW Sydney University Postgraduate Award

Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship

Heine Family Foundation

Cancer Council NSW project

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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