Pathophysiology of Paget's Disease of Bone



Status:Recruiting
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - 99
Updated:2/10/2019
Start Date:April 2016
End Date:June 2019
Contact:Janet Crane, M.D.
Email:jcrane2@jhmi.edu
Phone:410-502-6425

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Investigation of Pathophysiology of Angiogenesis and Osteogenesis in Paget's Disease of Bone

Paget's disease of the bone is a skeletal disorder which results in increased and
disorganized bone remodeling, leading to dense but fragile and expanding bones. The
identified genetic causes of Paget's disease of bone only explain why bone is destroyed, but
not why the bone formed in its place is abnormal.

Current treatment for people with Paget's disease of the bone is limited to patients with
bone pain, thought to be related to high rate of bone turnover (breakdown and rebuilding of
bone) and works by slowing down the rate of bone breakdown. The current treatment does not
address the excess blood vessels and bone formed.

This research is being done to understand factors that may promote blood vessel and bone
formation in Paget's disease of the bone.

The genetic mutations found in Paget's disease currently only account for about 15% of cases
and are limited to genes that affect osteoclast differentiation and function. These mutations
alone are insufficient to explain the full phenotype, particularly hypervascularity and
increased bone formation. Through a series of basic science studies, the investigators have
recently found that preosteoclasts secrete chemokines to promote migration of various stem
cells, which then differentiate into osteoblasts and endothelial cells to support
osteogenesis and angiogenesis, respectively.

The investigators will perform a cross sectional study of patients with active Paget's
disease of bone compared to similar people without Paget's disease of bone. The goal is to
enroll 10 patients with Paget's disease of the bone (cases) and 10 healthy, age- and
sex-matched people (controls) whom meet similar exclusion criteria. Participants who consent
to the study will undergo a brief history and physical exam, allow review of medical records
relevant to their disease, and have one blood (5 tablespoons) sample drawn.

The investigators hypothesize that specific chemokine concentrations are increased in people
with Paget's disease of the bone compared to controls. The investigators also hypothesize
that these levels correlate with severity of disease. Therefore, the investigators primary
objective is to determine if serum chemokine levels are increased in patients with Paget's
disease of the bone. The secondary objective is to evaluate if the serum chemokine
concentrations correlate with various markers of disease activity. Findings could aid in the
clinical monitoring of patients with Paget's disease of the bone and could provide an
additional therapeutic target to improve treatment of this painful disease.

Inclusion Criteria for Cases:

- Men and women between the ages of 18-99 years who have evidence of active Paget's
disease of bone as clinically and/or radiographically defined by:

- Increased serum alkaline phosphatase or increased serum collagen type 1
c-telopeptide (CTX) or increase in urinary pyridinoline at diagnosis

- AND history of at least one of the following signs/symptoms: Pagetoid lesions(s)
on x-ray/CT/MRI, increased uptake of radioactive substance by bone scan, bone
pain, fracture, hearing loss, headache, hypercalcemia, or bony deformity.

Inclusion criteria for controls:

- Men and women between the ages of 18-99 years who match age within 5 years of cases
and gender who do NOT have evidence of Paget's disease of bone as defined by:

- No bone pain or bony deformity

- Normal serum alkaline phosphatase

Exclusion Criteria:

- Osteosarcoma or other blastic bony metastases alone

- Fibrous dysplasia of bone

- Hyperostosis frontalis interna

- All men and women < 18 years or > 99 years

- Pregnancy (women) determined by self-report

- Current use of oral contraceptive tablets or Depo-Provera™ (women)

- Current use of hormone replacement therapy

- Creatinine clearance < 60 ml/min./1.73 m2 by Cockcroft-Gault based on most recent
serum creatinine level (if greater than 1 year since last assessment, will be measured
on collected blood sample to verify eligibility)

- Current smoking or tobacco use

- Alcohol use greater than 3 units daily

- Use of thiazolidinediones within the last year

- Use of medications known to impact bone and mineral metabolism, including use of a
bisphosphonate in the last 11 months; ever use of teriparatide or denosumab; use of
calcitonin, selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs), or estrogen within the
past 6 months, prednisone > 5 mg for over 10 days in the last three months,
anti-epileptic medications (e.g. phenytoin, carbamezapine, phenobarbitol, and
primidone); current or use within the past year of aromatase inhibitors; leuprolide;
histrelin

- History of a thyroid problem that is currently uncontrolled as defined by most recent
thyroid stimulating hormone levels < 0.1 microIU/mL (if greater than 6 months since
last assessment, will be measured on collected blood sample to verify eligibility)

- Other known metabolic or structural bone disease other than low bone density (e.g.
hyperparathyroidism, multiple myeloma, sarcoid or other granulomatous disease, celiac
disease, osteopetrosis, osteomalacia, osteitis fibrosa cystica)

- Other significant medical illness (heart disease, pulmonary disease, inflammatory
bowel disease, malignancy other than ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) or non-melanoma
skin cancer, rheumatologic conditions including rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus,
renal disease requiring dialysis, etc.)

- Inability to understand and provide informed consent.
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