Increased numbers of nonattached osteoclasts after long-term zoledronic acid therapy in mice

S Kuroshima, VAA Go, J Yamashita - Endocrinology, 2012 - academic.oup.com
Endocrinology, 2012academic.oup.com
Osteoclasts are key players in the maintenance of bone, which is an endocrine target and
organ. Bisphosphonates, used for the management of metastatic bone diseases and
osteoporosis, suppress osteoclasts. However, the impact of continuously suppressed
osteoclasts is unknown. In this study, mice received zoledronic acid (ZA) for 13 months,
nearly half the lifespan of mice, and the effects of continual osteoclast suppression on the
bone environment and oral wound healing were determined. ZA therapy suppressed …
Osteoclasts are key players in the maintenance of bone, which is an endocrine target and organ. Bisphosphonates, used for the management of metastatic bone diseases and osteoporosis, suppress osteoclasts. However, the impact of continuously suppressed osteoclasts is unknown. In this study, mice received zoledronic acid (ZA) for 13 months, nearly half the lifespan of mice, and the effects of continual osteoclast suppression on the bone environment and oral wound healing were determined. ZA therapy suppressed osteoclasts, resulting in significantly more bone mass compared with control. Despite continuous and intense suppression of bone loss in mice receiving ZA, serum calcium levels were maintained in the normal range. No differences were noted in serum tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) 5b levels between ZA-treated and control mice. Histomorphometric analyses of bones revealed that ZA therapy significantly decreased osteoclasts on the bone surface but, instead, substantially increased TRAP+ mononuclear cells and osteoclasts that were not on the bone surface. When oral trauma was induced, such TRAP+ mononuclear and nonattached osteoclasts increased considerably with increased inflammatory cell infiltration in the wounds. As a result, oral wound healing was hindered at the connective tissue level. Healing of the epithelium was unaffected. These findings indicate that the continual suppression of osteoclasts does not affect serum calcium levels and that long-term ZA therapy stimulates nonattached osteoclast and TRAP+ mononuclear cell formation that are expanded rapidly in response to oral trauma. Caution should be exercised when using the serum TRAcP5b to estimate the efficacy of antiresorptive therapy.
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