Teriparatide treatment in a heart transplant patient with a chronic kidney disease and a low-turnover bone disease: a case report.
Astrid Fahrleitner-PammerD WagnerP KrisperK AmreinH DimaiPublished in: Osteoporosis international : a journal established as result of cooperation between the European Foundation for Osteoporosis and the National Osteoporosis Foundation of the USA (2016)
Low-turnover bone disease is a complication of chronic kidney disease and a long-term steroid therapy. Currently, the only bone anabolic treatment available is teriparatide (TPTD). So far, no data exist in heart transplant patients, and only one single case with histomorphometric analysis of a dialysis patient with a low-turnover bone disease has been published. The current report shows the effect of a 1-year TPTD therapy in a cardiac transplant patient with 10 vertebral and 3 peripheral fractures who had developed a chronic kidney failure while receiving triple immunosuppressive therapy. A transiliac bone biopsy following tetracycline labeling was performed prior and after 1 year of treatment, showing an increase in the bone formation and improvement of the structural indices (20-fold increase of osteoid volume/bone volume, fourfold increase of osteoid surface/bone surface and increases of wall thickness (+15%), trabecular thickness (+9%), and trabecular number (+38%)). Bone mineral density was stable, no new vertebral fractures had occurred, the therapy was well-tolerated, and the patient improved clinically.
Keyphrases
- bone mineral density
- postmenopausal women
- chronic kidney disease
- end stage renal disease
- body composition
- peritoneal dialysis
- heart failure
- atrial fibrillation
- stem cells
- left ventricular
- optical coherence tomography
- ejection fraction
- machine learning
- electronic health record
- patient reported outcomes
- patient reported