Bone turnover markers (CTX and P1NP): do you have a baseline?
Currently i am on forteo therapy with a couple bone markers tests done. However, I didnt have ctx or p1np tested before the start of forteo as a baseline, regrettably.
It is known that the CTX value varies greatly among different individuals, with a very wide range. For post menopausal women, the range could be 34 - 1037 pg/ml; while for perimenopausal women 34-635 pg/ml. Different labs also have a slight different range values.
CTX, a bone resorption (breakdown) marker, is heavily influenced by a number of factors, such as food intake, circadian variation and exercise/life style, etc.
Bone remodeling is a dynamic and complex process. CTX itself may not fully reveal the whole picture. The bone building marker P1NP, is a lot less influenced by external factors. Taking both into consideration at the same time may shed more lights than looking at CTX or P1NP alone.
For those who had their CTX and P1NP tested before treatment with a bone drug, could you share the results if you don't mind? Thanks a lot!
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Osteoporosis & Bone Health Support Group.
@normahorn your btms are puzzling to say the least. One thought, if you have the luxury of time before any treatments, repeat dexa yearly to get a feel for annual rate of bone loss. Personally I'd repeat btms in 6 months just to see any possible variation.
Has your endo done exhaustive exams or tests to exclude secondary causes (at this point I'm sure you went thru lots of testing)? Did you in the past (or present) have meds or disease states that would adversely affect bone health? Things happened in the past could've affected bone density but the factor(s) may no longer be present, such as calcium intake/diet, sedentary life style, a particular rx or disease state.
Even everything appears to be good, our bones go downhill as we age, just with a different speed for each person. A person I know who has been conscious with health throughout her life, had her btms and dexa followed for years. Her btms looking good, dexa "deteriotes" at a normal speed as a postmenopausal woman. Now in her mid 70s, she has op according to criteria of T score.
to @mayblin
About frax score:
I have 4,9 for spine and 1,3 for hip.
The risedronate will be the first medicine, and Dr. said if the results will be OK, I can stop it in 3-4 years. It all depends on many factors.
Thanks
But confused since mine is 9.08 and I’m close to 10
How would your 4.2 seem like you don’t have osteoporosis but do ?
Shouldn’t we be close to 10?
Can you clarify I don’t understand the numbers?
As I understand it, the larger the number is means that one is losing bone faster than building new bone. Conversely, the smaller the number, bone building is occurring at a faster rate than bone loss is. However, that is a far too simplistic approach but makes people feel that they have some control.
The value would come in monitoring changes during treatment.
Don't feel bad. It took me a long time to remember how to calculate ratios. I was really frustrated. Thankfully, Google was a big help.
Based on your CTx of 336 and P1NP of 37, your ratio is 10:1.1. This is a great ratio for maintaining bone health. Many factors influence bone turnover, so it's hard to say why your numbers were good on that particular day. Considering you have osteoporosis, this hasn't always been the case. It could have been a one-time thing, so take these numbers as just a snapshot
Here's the calculation
CTx/P1NP = 10/x.
336/37 = 10/x
10 ÷ (336/37) = x
10/9.08 = 1.1
x = 1.1
Resulting ration 10 : 1.1
Thank you !
@hopefullibrarian,
Thank you for doing this calculation, and for the formula for us all to use!
I apologize if my previous explanations about CTx to P1NP (CTx:P1NP) were unclear. Let me attempt to clarify here. But before I do, I'd like to share a simpler way to track treatment progress that I learned from a YouTube video from Dr. Doug Lucas posted last December.
You can watch it here: https://youtu.be/NgZf1Vu8UyM?si=elj8Y6u_bWMLY9UT
Dr. Lucas uses this equation:
P1NP ÷ (CTx ÷ 1000) = X
When the result (X) increases, it indicates you're moving in the right direction. Here are my results from January and April using this calculation:
- Before Evenity treatment (January): X = 95.5
- 2 weeks after the 3rd Evenity treatment (April): X = 287
The number went up dramatically with Evenity treatment, so I know that it's working.
Now, let me provide a clearer explanation of the 10:1 ratio:
A good ratio in this context means that for every unit increase in CTx (a marker of bone breakdown), we ideally want to see a proportional increase in P1NP (a marker of bone formation).
For instance, if the ratio is 10:1 (10 to 1), it suggests that for every 10 units of CTx, there is 1 unit of P1NP. This indicates a balance where some bone formation is occurring relative to bone breakdown.
If our goal is to increase P1NP, we should ideally see the ratio adjust accordingly. A higher ratio, like 10:2 or 10:3, would mean that for every 10 units of CTx, there are 2 or 3 units of P1NP, respectively. This higher ratio indicates more bone formation relative to bone breakdown, which is beneficial for bone health.
Therefore, a good ratio when aiming for an increase in P1NP shows a proportional or higher increase in P1NP compared to CTx, suggesting improved bone formation relative to breakdown."
I hope that's helpful. It can be a real brain twister.
If your goal is just to track treatment progress, I recommend using Dr. Doug's equation. It's far more straight-forward.
Hi normahorn,
I attempted to write a clearer explanation of how the ratio can be useful in a separate comment. You can jump to it here: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/comment/1099229/