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Rapid improvement of bone metabolism after infliximab treatment in Crohn's disease.

Authors :
Franchimont, N
Putzeys, V
Collette, Jean Marie
Vermeire, Séverine
Rutgeerts, Paul
De Vos, M
Van Gossum, André
Franchimont, Denis
Fiasse, René
Pelckmans, Paul
Malaisse, Willy
Belaiche, Jacques
Louis, Edouard
Franchimont, N
Putzeys, V
Collette, Jean Marie
Vermeire, Séverine
Rutgeerts, Paul
De Vos, M
Van Gossum, André
Franchimont, Denis
Fiasse, René
Pelckmans, Paul
Malaisse, Willy
Belaiche, Jacques
Louis, Edouard
Source :
Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics, 20 (6
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Crohn's disease is associated with low bone mineral density and altered bone metabolism. AIM: To assess the evolution of bone metabolism in Crohn's disease patients treated with infliximab. METHODS: We studied 71 Crohn's disease patients treated for the first time with infliximab for refractory Crohn's disease. Biochemical markers of bone formation (type-I procollagen N-terminal propeptide, bone-specific alkaline phosphatase, osteocalcin) and of bone resorption (C-telopeptide of type-I collagen) were measured in the serum before and 8 weeks after infliximab therapy and compared with values in a matched healthy control group. RESULTS: Eight weeks after treatment with infliximab, a normalization of bone markers was observed with a median increase in formation markers of 14-51% according to marker and a lower but significant decrease in resorption marker (median 11%). A clinically relevant increase in bone formation markers was present in 30-61% of patients according to the marker. A clinically relevant decrease in C-telopeptide of type-I collagen was present in 38% of patients. No association was found with any tested demographic or clinical parameter. CONCLUSION: Infliximab therapy in Crohn's disease may rapidly influence bone metabolism by acting either on bone formation or bone resorption. This improvement seems to be independent of clinical response to infliximab.<br />Clinical Trial<br />Controlled Clinical Trial<br />Journal Article<br />Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't<br />FLWIN<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics, 20 (6
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn764627278
Document Type :
Electronic Resource