JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Mechanisms of bone loss following allogeneic and autologous hemopoietic stem cell transplantation.

A significant proportion of patients will be long-term survivors of bone marrow transplantation (BMT) and little is known about their risk of late bony complications. We therefore evaluated bone mineral density (BMD) prior to BMT, post-transplantation changes in BMD, and mechanisms of bone loss in long-term survivors. We performed two analyses. The first was a cross-sectional study of 83 consecutive BMT patients (38 F, 45 M), examining the relationship between BMD and bone turnover, measured immediately prior to transplantation, and a number of disease and patient variables. The second was a prospective study of 39 patients (19F, 20 M) followed for a median of 30 months (range 5-64 months) following either allogeneic (allo, n = 29) or autologous (auto, n = 10) BMT to determine if bone loss was related to treatment of graft versus host disease (GVHD) with glucocorticoids and cyclosporine A, high bone turnover rates, or hypogonadism. Auto BMT recipients acted as a control group for effects of GVHD therapy on BMD. Prior to BMT, spinal and femoral neck (FN) BMDs were 8.6% and 14% lower in female auto BMT recipients than in female allo BMT recipients, respectively (p = 0.12 and p = 0. 003). Urinary bone resorption markers were higher than in normal gender- and age-matched control subjects. Patients treated previously with glucocorticoids also had 8% lower FN BMD. Glucocorticoid-pretreated women with amenorrhoea had lower lumbar spine (LS) and FN BMDs than eumenorrheic women and women receiving HRT. Post-allo BMT, patients lost 11.7% of FN BMD compared with a nonsignificant decrease of 1.1% post-auto BMT (p < 0.001). Spinal BMD and total body bone mineral content (TBBMC) decreased by 3.9% and 3.5%, respectively, post-allo, compared with an increase (1.5%, p = 0.03) or nonsignificant decrease (-3.7%, p = NS), respectively, post-auto BMT. Post-allo BMT bone loss correlated best with the cumulative prednisolone dose at the LS and FN, and with average daily prednisolone dose for TBBMC. At the spine, the rate of bone loss was 4%/10 g of prednisolone, while the rate of bone loss at the FN was greater (9%/10 g of prednisolone). Bone loss was also negatively related to the duration of cyclosporine therapy for GVHD and baseline deoxypyridinoline concentrations. Avascular necrosis of the femoral head occurred in four, and vertebral and rib fractures occurred in one of the allo BMT patients, but in no auto BMT patients. In conclusion, BMT recipients are at risk of osteoporosis secondary to bone loss associated with their underlying illness and/or chemotherapy, particularly in female autograft recipients, and in allograft recipients secondary to GVHD and its treatment.

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