Mixed results 1 year after Forteo: What are your thoughts?
Hello all,
Recently I've pondering with my dexa results 1 year post Forteo treatment. There are so many involved factors which made it hard to pinpoint whats the main culprit for the negative part of the results.
Background and/Hx: 61yo diagnosed with op summer of 2022, no known fractures. No prior treatment of op including HRT. Started Forteo Sept. 2022. Comorbidities include mild cvd with hyperlipidemia which is controlled with a small dose of crestor; asymptomatic mild GERD w/o treatment and borderline pre-diabetic managed via lifestyle and diet.
At 13 mo post Forteo, Dexa results after vs before treatment are as follows:
L1-L4 spine: avg Tscore -3.1 vs -3.4, with a 4.9% bmd improvement. Each sub level also shows improvements;
Hip: avg Tscore -2.2 vs -1.8, with a -7.6% bmd decreasing!
TBS L1-L4: 1.318 vs 1.264, a 4.3% improvement.
P1NP is elevated in 400+
While I'm very happy with the spine and TBS improvements, the results for the hip/femoral region is very alarming, to say the least.
Has anyone of you experienced or heard of such discrepancy in results that Forteo would produce?
My immediate instinct is that I didn't exercise enough. I was only doing weigh/strength training with free weights consistently, targeting upper, lower and core, 15-20 reps x3-4, twice per week; with some walking and wearing weighted vest/backpack. Never thought about loading hip bones (but, I do quite a bit squats). After some reading I realized maybe I also need to increase amount of quality protein a bit. What's a good protein intake per kg body weight per day, in your opinion?
Anyhow, juggling among drug treatment choices as well as optimal nutrition, supplements and exercise is not an easy task.
Any opinions and suggestions are truly appreciated. The collective experiences and knowledge from patients are powerful!
UPDATE: March 30, 2024
My dexa scan 13 months post forteo therapy was reevaluated later and was found there were technical errors involved. My endo concluded that my femur neck and hip at both sides didn't have any significant change afterall. This is a good news to me. Although I wish I had some positive improvements at femur necks and hips, the results are within expectations. Thanks a lot to those who read my story. mayblin
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Osteoporosis & Bone Health Support Group.
Jumping and hopping can slightly displace my kneecap. But it never makes me laugh. You must be very good natured. I can run and skip without trouble.
We share the impression about elders, but it may be more about how much absorption your body can effect. One vexing question is how do you know.
If you look at the mcchanisms of action with bisphosphonates objectively, you'd conclude that a bisphosphonate would "blunt" the effect of Forteo. I have it from a bone expert that alendronate is the bis to use intermittantly because is has the least persistance in the bone. zolendronate (Reclast) is the most persistent in the bone.
While scavenging for ideas, it occurred to me that we need brief periods of osteoclasts. Osteoblasts work most effectively when coupling with osteoclasts. My plan with the bone markers is to follow them until the anabolic window closes and then pause the Forteo. If the CTX or when CTX rises sufficiently or P1NP drops significantly, I'll take either alendronate or Forteo. I'll try to avoid the bisphosphonates because of the type of bone they form.
The very nice curve illustrated by Kim et all might be accurate.
I have it from an endocrinologist that in his long practice the anabolic window in most women drops after three months on Forteo according to the bone markers. While that didn't happen to me or my markers, we may be all quite different from the graph. This being the value of the bone markers.
Neither the bone markers, nor qualitative CT are standard of care or widely used. "Economic feasibility" has a role in adoption of these standards. Both types of measurement are costly and insurers don't like to pay for them.
But to your question about CTX. It isn't as stable as P1NP. Some people say unreliable but it does reflect what is happening with the bone, it is just more variable. Time of day, whether you've eaten or not, whether you've exercised or had a recent fracture affect the CTX results.
I want them both because I'm using them in relation to each other in this way. My CTX reading has increased by 1/3rd, but my P1NP has doubled. I''ll continue with Forteo until CTX reads as a higher percentage increase than P1NP. But this may be an incorrect mcethod.
Your P1NP reading is great and I would say that you wouldn't have been advantaged by having it before treatment. And even that you wouldn't have been advantaged by having a CTX. Clearly Forteo is effective for you. If your P1NP were equivocal, then I'd wish you'd had both bone markers before and after. I get the markers every three months.
It is important and also more interesting to know your source and question the information.
You noticed that the article recommended more protein than the CDC recommends. The author works for the beef and egg industry.
I try take 100 grams of protein a day. Just guessing.
Hi - I understand that walking can improve BMD in the hips though I see you were doing a lot of exercising! I hope you and your doctor figure it out. I lost a lot of hip strength after my husband passed and I spent a lot of time at a desk sorting out his affairs. It’s taken a few months to get back to normal. My overall BMD decreased as well.
What are considered good PINP and CTX values? Mine were 50 and 210 respectively.
Awfultruth,
the link to counteropinion to longstanding hypotheses was intentional. Your summary of theories is useful and I thank you for giving them voice. I assume that you subscribe to these because whereas you summarize objectively you insert "real" and "noted" expert.
We both give space to individuals who work for the cattle industry. In my case egg and cattle. My own leaning is toward the opinion of the CDC, WHO and MAYO. Though financial considerations affect many of the statistics we encounter. Statistics are different from whatever qualifies as "fairly compelling evidence."
If your reply were an arguement, I would cite the several straw dogs. But your reply is intended as summary with few lapses.
In my unqualified opinion the truth for each individual lies (a mysterious) somewhere inbetween. At 100lbs I take a measured 100 grams of protein from fish or chicken a day. I never take more than 25 grams in a digestible period. I don't count protein from other sources because availability isn't absorbability.
Norma, how do you delete a reply after the person you've intended it for reads it.
I might have been too eager to give my hip/femor a "load" after seeing the concerning results. Hope I didn't inadvertently damage any parts of my knees, which my strength training coach kept telling us to protect. I'm backing off from the higher impact ones for now. As far as protein goes, I'm uping to 90grams per day from 75. Yes quality and quantity matter yet opinion differs. Hopefully the amount of protein will help me build more muscle mass. I also don't mind having extra adipose tissue as long as they don't all go to my tummy, that might be a tall order.
gently, whats your strategy to get enough calcium?
I don't know much about the anatomy of the bones. Looking at the part where the tech took dexa scan of the femoral bones (the neck), they looks like a trabacular part of the cortical bone, ie, porous part. Am i right? If theoretically the newer made bones by forteo are more porous hence less dense, then would L spine be the same? Mccormick did mention he has seen the wrist bones, which are made of 80-90% dense cortical bones, suffer a decline in bmd after forteo. I'm not too fazed yet since my hips/femur started at ~1.8 which gave me a bit wiggle room. If the speed of the trend continues, then I may regret my decisiom of jumping on the rx bandwagon too early.
If I understand your general strategy correctly, you will be using CTX &P1NP level to exit Forteo? Do the level of these bone markers correlate well to state of bone building vs resorption? Will you do a DEXA at the same time too? Forteo then Forsamax I understand, but whats the rational behind Forteo (i assume followed by a holiday) then Forteo?
Also my impression is that sources of your trust prefer fosamax over reclast. Is this due to their stickiness to the bones? I read fosamax could also stick to bones very long up to 10 years, but I need to read more about this. My doctor is planning reclast for me for 1-2 years after forteo. Now I'm open to reclast, fosamax (I'm searching for a way to get around of the stomach issue since I have mild gerd) . HRT is also on the table since it's a natural way to inhibit osteoclast. But right now i know nothing about hrt. Bisphosphalated bones concern me as well.
The longer term picture (say 10-20years from the start of 1st therapy) is also very uncertain. I felt if we are lucky, maybe we could get bmd to -2 to -2.5 even a bit worse and safely get off the last drug and maintain what we've got just via healthy eating and exercise. If not, a well calculated plan such as anabolic to bis, then maybe back to anabolic... this maybe doable, but for how long? Evenity is an interesting consideration, it seems to be a 'perfect' drug on paper if it mimic real life bone remodeling process. The big question also is, then what?
Teri, thank you very much for sharing your experiences with fosamax and exercising suggestions. From what I read, it seems most op meds help lumber vertebrae more than cortical femur bones, maybe with the exception of ProLia.
It is unfortunate that we couldn't single out one exercise to evaluate its effectiveness. Lots of opinions suggest that impact exercise such as jumping and stomping give cortical bones a load to keep it healthy. I for now have to give those high impact exercise a rest to keep my knees happy. If appropriate, please share if you get improved dexa results after your starting mini trampoline.
Your results are very encouraging for sure! How long will you and your doctor plan to be on fosamax?
Hi @mayblin, after five years on alendronate (Fosamax) you're supposed to take a drug holiday - go off it, due to the risk of atypical fractures. Dr. Fishman commented that alendronate usually increases bone density for the first two years, then stops.
I started my third year this summer...reluctantly.
You can google specific exercises to increase bone density in the hips...there are some that are gentle on the knees.
Do take care!
mayblin, my strategy with calcium is not recommended even by me. While I'm meticulous about protein. My (mis)take on calcium is that calcium is not the problem. Still, I have rules (for myself). I take 250mg before Forteo. I never take calcium without taking K2 two hours before. I never take more than 250 mg at a digestible time. I've read that we can't absorb more than 500mg at a time. But I larger people must have more villi than I do. I don't want any of that calcium heading to my arteries.
It is considered by many that excess calcium from supplementation is a partial cause of athersclerosis. There are many who discount the connection. I also take 250mg at night because we lose calcium overnight according to an amazing bone expert who suggested the final dose of the day.
If I were counting milligrams of calcium I wouldn't count the calcium in dairy because calcium lactate is the least absorbable form. I do drink ultrafiltrated milk mostly to avoid the sugers in milk. Fairlife 380mg of uncounted calcium per cup.
I think you can get enough calcium through a good diet, which is why I have osteoporosis.
I fully recommend Fairlife non fat milk and Citrical if you break the 500minis in half.
I think estrogen is the problem
Too many Is in this comment.
norma, the values differ by lab. They should be on your printout, though I've noticed that some indicate that normal values haven't been established. I can give you the values from the lab I use. For us: P1NP 16-96 mcg/L CTX 104-1008 pg/mL Your look good, I'd even trade you especially the CTX.