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Serum OPG (serum + opg)
Selected AbstractsSerum osteoprotegerin is increased in Crohn's disease: A population-based case control studyINFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES, Issue 4 2005Charles N Bernstein MD Abstract Background: There is a potential interface between osteoporosis and the chronic inflammation of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and the osteoprotegerin (OPG)/receptor for activated nuclear factor-,B (RANK)/RANK ligand (RANKL) signaling pathway may be an important mediator, although data are limited. Methods: We conducted a population-based case-control seroassay study to look for alterations in serum OPG and soluble RANKL (sRANKL). The study population included IBD patients who were 18 to 50 years old with Crohn's disease (CD; n = 287) or ulcerative colitis (UC; n = 166), age-matched healthy controls (n = 368), and nonaffected siblings of IBD patients (n = 146). Serum OPG and sRANKL were measured by enzyme-linked immunoassay. Sex-specific reference ranges were derived from the healthy controls. Results: Analysis of variance (ANOVA) confirmed significant group differences in women for mean serum OPG (P = 0.018). CD women had higher values of OPG than UC women (P = 0.028) or healthy controls (P = 0.045), whereas the other groups were similar. OPG levels were above the reference range in 13/173 (8%) of CD women, exceeding the expected proportion (P = 0.032). In contrast, no differences in OPG were seen in men between controls, CD, or UC. Estrogen use in women (P = 0.000002) and corticosteroid use in men (P = 0.026) were associated with higher OPG levels. In multivariate analysis, CD diagnosis (P = 0.031) and estrogen use (P = 0.000002) were independently associated with higher OPG levels. No group differences were seen in mean serum sRANKL measurements. Conclusions: An OPG:sRANKL imbalance with OPG exceeding sRANKL should inhibit osteoclastogenesis and promote bone formation. CD is associated with increased fracture risk, and possibly, the paradoxically higher OPG is a counterregulatory response to factors such as inflammatory cytokines, promoting high bone turnover. Alternatively, elevated OPG in CD may reflect T-cell activation. [source] The ratio of circulating osteoprotegerin to RANKL in early rheumatoid arthritis predicts later joint destructionARTHRITIS & RHEUMATISM, Issue 6 2006P. P. Geusens Objective Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic inflammatory disease that may result in debilitating joint deformities with destruction of bone and cartilage. Inflammation is still considered the pivotal inducer of both components of joint damage. Results of recent animal studies suggested a prominent contribution of osteoclastic bone resorption that could be dissociated from inflammation. RANKL and its natural decoy receptor, osteoprotegerin (OPG), play key roles in osteoclast activation. In a group of patients with early RA not treated with disease-modifying drugs, we tested the hypothesis that osteoclast activation, reflected by the serum OPG:RANKL ratio at baseline, is negatively associated with progression of bone damage, independent of inflammation. Methods OPG and RANKL levels, together with a parameter of inflammation (first-year time-averaged erythrocyte sedimentation rate [tESR]), were measured in 92 patients with newly diagnosed early active RA who were participants in a randomized study. The tESR and the OPG:RANKL ratio were evaluated for the ability to predict 5-year radiographic progression of joint damage. Results The first-year tESR and the OPG:RANKL ratio, as measured at baseline, independently predicted 5-year radiographic progression of joint damage (both P , 0.001). Progression of radiographic damage was greatest in patients with a high tESR and a low OPG:RANKL ratio and was lowest in patients with a low tESR and a high OPG:RANKL ratio. Conclusion This study in patients with early untreated RA is the first to confirm the findings in animal models of arthritis, that radiographic progression of the bone component of joint destruction is dependent on both inflammation (tESR) and osteoclast activation (the OPG:RANKL ratio). [source] The relationship between circulating osteoprotegerin levels and bone mineral metabolism in healthy womenCLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 2 2004Ki Won Oh Summary objective, Osteoprotegerin (OPG) is a recently identified cytokine that acts as a decoy receptor for the RANK ligand. Moreover, OPG has been shown to be an important inhibitor of osteoclastogenesis in animal models. However, the relationship between circulating OPG levels and female bone status in human populations is unclear. In this study we undertook to investigate the relationship between circulating OPG levels and bone mineral metabolism in healthy women. patients and measurements, Our subjects were 287 women aged 37,73 years (mean age 51·5 years). The serum concentrations of OPG were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The biochemical markers of bone turnover and FSH were measured using standard methods. Bone mineral densities at the lumbar spine and femoral neck were measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. results, Postmenopausal women had a significantly higher mean value of serum OPG than premenopausal women (1358·5 ± 32·5 pg/ml vs. 1228·8 ± 33·3 pg/ml, P < 0·01). Serum OPG levels were positively correlated with age (r = 0·169, P < 0·01), as were urine deoxypyridinoline levels (r = 0·133, P < 0·05) and serum FSH levels (r = 0·187, P < 0·01) in a bivariate correlation analyses. In a multiple regression analysis, only urine calcium excretion was identified as a significant predictor for serum OPG levels. conclusions, Circulating OPG levels were found to be associated with urine calcium excretion and menopause in healthy women. Our observations suggest that circulating OPG levels reflect an antiresorptive activity in bone, and they are related to endogenous oestrogen levels. [source] |