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Scientists
discover way to Jumpstart Bone’s Healing
Process
Newswise — Rarely will physicians use the word “miraculous”
when discussing patient recoveries. But
that’s the very phrase orthopaedic
physicians and scientists are using in
upstate New York to describe their emerging
stem cell research that could have a
profound impact on the treatment of bone
injuries.
Results from preliminary work being released today,
patients confined to wheelchairs were able
to walk or live independently again because
their broken bones finally healed.
At the heart of the research is the drug teriparatide, or
Forteo, which was approved by the FDA in
2002 for the treatment of osteoporosis.
Astute observations led a team of clinicians and
researchers to uncover how this drug can
also boost our bodies’ bone stem cell
production to the point that adults’ bones
appear to have the ability to heal at a rate
typically seen when they were young kids.
Baseline research presented in February at the Orthopaedic
Research Society meeting revealed that of
145 patients who had an unhealed bone
fracture – half of them for six months or
longer – 93 percent showed significant
healing and pain control after being on
teriparatide for only eight to 12 weeks.
These findings were enough to convince the National
Institutes of Health to fund a clinical
trial underway in Rochester, and if the
preliminary data are any indication,
researchers may have discovered a new,
in-the-body stem cell therapy that can
jumpstart the body’s natural healing process
in bones.
Aging Bones Heal Slower
Of the estimated six million fractures in
the United States each year, approximately
five percent will have slow or incomplete
healing.
According to J. Edward Puzas, Ph.D., who heads up
orthopaedic bone research at the University
of Rochester Medical Center and is the
principal investigator of the clinical
trial, a large portion of non-healing
fractures tend to occur in older adults.
“In many people, as they get older, their skeleton loses
the ability to heal fractures and repair
itself,” Puzas said.
“With careful application of teriparatide, we believe we’ve
found a way to turn back the clock on
fracture healing through a simple, in-body
stem cell therapy.”
Those especially hard hit are the nearly 60,000 Americans
suffering from pelvic fractures, where
bracing and immobilization are not an option
for an injury that leaves people immobile
and in pain before the bone fuses.
“It takes three to four months for a typical pelvic
fracture to heal. But during those three
months, patients can be in excruciating
pain, because there are no medical devices
or other treatments that can provide relief
to the patient,” said Susan V. Bukata, M.D.,
medical director of the Center for Bone
Health at the University of Rochester
Medical Center Bukata.
“Imagine if we can give patients a way to cut the time of
their pain and immobility in half? That’s
what teriparatide did in our initial
research.”
Bukata said much more was at stake then just comfort and
pain relief. Patients who would ordinarily
be confined to nursing homes or require
additional medical attention because of
non-healing fractures might be able to live
an independent life.
Bukata and Puzas estimate that if this drug saved just one
week in a nursing home, it would pay for
itself – and beyond.
“Many people don’t realize that pelvic fracture carries
with them the same mortality as hip
fractures – in one year, approximately
one-quarter of all older women with pelvic
fractures will die from complications,”
Bukata said.
“And during that year of recovery, a patient typically
puts a greater strain on our health care
system, not to mention their pain and
suffering.”;
The impetus for the research began in
Bukata’s clinic, where she saw painful bone
fractures in osteoporotic patients quickly
heal within a few months of taking
teriparatide.
At the time, Bukata also served on a research team at the
University’s Center for Musculoskeletal
Research, and she began to advocate that the
team direct its efforts in an entirely new
direction based on the results she was
seeing with patients who were taking
teriparatide.
“I had patients with severe osteoporosis, in tremendous
pain from multiple fractures throughout
their spine and pelvis, who I would put on
teriparatide,” said Bukata.
“When they would come back for their follow-up visits three
months later, it was amazing to see not just
the significant healing in their fractures,
but to realize they were pain-free – a new
and welcome experience for many of these
patients.”
Puzas and Bukata developed a plan to focus attention in
both the lab and clinic to understand if her
observations were a fluke or if there was an
underlying scientific process producing such
life-changing results for patients.
“While we had come to understand how teriparatide builds
bone more robustly than the body can on its
own, up to that point, we had no clue how
the drug would or could help with fracture
healing,” Puzas said.
Bukata began prescribing teriparatide to patients with
non-healing fractures, and was amazed at her
findings: 93 percent showed significant
healing and pain control after being on
teriparatide for only eight to 12 weeks.
And in the lab, Puzas began to understand how teriparatide
stimulates bone stem cells into action.
Closing the Gap
When a fracture occurs, a bone becomes
unstable and can move back and forth
creating a painful phenomenon known as
micromotion. As the bone begins healing it
must progress through specific, well-defined
stages.
First, osteoclasts – cells that can break down bone – clean
up any fragments or debris produced during
the break. Next, a layer of cartilage –
called a callus – forms around the fracture
that ultimately calcifies, preventing the
bony ends from moving, providing relief from
the significant pain brought on by
micromotion.
Only after the callus is calcified do the bone forming
cells – osteoblasts – begin their work.
They replace the cartilage with true bone, and eventually
reform the fracture to match the shape and
structure of the bone into what it was
before the break.
According to Puzas, teriparatide significantly speeds up
fracture healing by changing the behavior
and number of the cartilage and the bone
stem cells involved in the process.
“Teriparatide dramatically stimulates the bone’s stem cells
into action,” Puzas said.
“As a result, the callus forms quicker and stronger.
Osteoblasts form more bone and the
micromotion associated with the fracture is
more rapidly eliminated.
"All of this activity explains why people with non-healing
fractures can now return to normal function
sooner.”
“The decreased healing time is significant, especially when
fractures are in hard-to-heal areas like the
pelvis and the spine, where you can’t easily
immobilize the bone – and stop the pain,”
Bukata added.
“Typically, a pelvic fracture will take months to
heal, and people are in extreme pain for the
first eight to 12 weeks.
"This time was more than cut in half; we saw complete pain
relief, callus formation, and stability of
the fracture in people who had fractures
that up to that point had not healed.”
The new clinical research will study post-menopausal women
and men over 50 who come to the Emergency
Department at Strong Memorial Hospital with
a low-energy pelvic fracture.
Patients will be divided into two groups -- one offered
teriparatide, the other a placebo -- and
followed for 16 weeks to measure the
fracture healing process in a variety of
ways: pain levels, microscopic bone growth
determined through CT scans and functional
testing of bone strength, among others.
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