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Pretreatment with Pamidronate Decreases Bone Formation but Increases Callus Bone Volume in a Rat Closed Fracture Model

Abstract

Clinical concerns have been raised over prior exposure to bisphosphonates impairing fracture healing. To model this, groups of male Wistar rats were assigned to saline control or treatment groups receiving 0.15 mg/kg (low dose), 0.5 mg/kg (medium dose), and 5 mg/kg (high dose) Pamidronate (PAM) twice weekly for 4 weeks. At this point, closed fractures were made using an Einhorn apparatus, and bisphosphonate dosing was continued until the experimental endpoint. Specimens were analyzed at 2 and 6 weeks (N = 8 per group per time point). Twice weekly PAM dosing was found to have no effect on early soft callus remodeling at 2 weeks post fracture. At this time point, the highest dose PAM group gave significant increases in bone volume (+ 10%, p < 0.05), bone mineral content (+ 30%, p < 0.01), and bone mineral density (+ 10%, p < 0.01). This PAM dosing regimen showed more substantive effects on hard callus at 6 weeks post fracture, with PAM treatment groups showing + 46-79% increased bone volume. Dynamic bone labeling showed reduced calcein signal in the PAM-treated calluses (38-63%, p < 0.01) and reduced MAR (32-49%, p < 0.01), suggesting a compensatory reduction in bone anabolism. These data support the concept that bisphosphonates lead to profound decreases in bone turnover in fracture repair, however, this does not affect soft callus remodeling.

Type Journal
ISBN 1432-0827 (Electronic) 0171-967X (Linking)
Authors Morse, A.; McDonald, M. M.; Mikulec, K.; Schindeler, A.; Munns, C. F.; Little, D. G.
Responsible Garvan Author Dr Michelle McDonald
Publisher Name CALCIFIED TISSUE INTERNATIONAL
Published Date 2020-02-28
Published Volume 106
Published Issue 2
Published Pages 172-179
Status Published in-print
DOI 10.1007/s00223-019-00615-z
URL link to publisher's version https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31578632