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Paget's disease is the second most common bone
disease in the United States. Osteoporosis is No. 1. Paget's disease can
cause pain, deformities, hearing loss, and limits on activity. The
disease, which affects people in different ways, also can cause
arthritis and other serious consequences.
Many people may dismiss these disabilities as a
natural part of aging. The average age of diagnosis is 58 (although the
disease actually may begin much earlier). But the disease is treatable,
and with newer drugs on the market--including two approved by the Food
and Drug Administration in 1991 and 1995--there is greater opportunity
for patients with Paget's disease to find pain relief, limit the
progression of their disease, and, in some cases, reverse bone damage.
The challenge now, experts say, is to identify
patients early and, if feasible, start treatment promptly. It's
estimated that 3 percent of the American population over 40 is affected.
The problem is that many people with Paget's disease don't know they
have it because often it develops without symptoms.
Bone Gone Awry
Paget's disease gets its name from Sir James Paget, an
English doctor who served as surgeon to Queen Victoria. He first
described the disease's characteristics in 1876.
Many years later, scientists realized Paget's disease
is a disruption in the normal activity of bone tissue.
Bone is constantly being broken down by cells called
osteoclasts and rebuilt by cells called osteoblasts. This is called bone
turnover, and throughout the entire skeleton, this process is normally
in precise balance.
In Paget's disease, the process goes awry. In discrete
portions of bone, overly large osteoclasts dissolve bone too quickly--as
much as 50 times faster than normal. Osteoblasts try to compensate for
the increased pace by rapidly depositing new bone. But, in the hurried
process, the newly deposited bone is loose and bulky in structure,
rather than strong, compact, and neatly arranged.
Over time, pagetic bone becomes weak and soft and can
easily bend, actually shortening the part of the body affected: for
example, a leg or the spine. The bone may enlarge in diameter, though,
and it can become painful and break easily.
Any bone can be affected, but the most common sites
are the spine, skull, pelvis, and legs. Some patients may have only one
affected bone, while others may have two or more. The disease usually
does not spread to unaffected bones.
Common deformities include bowed legs, an enlarged
head or pelvis, and a curved back. Pagetic bone can affect other parts
of the body, causing added problems. For example, it can change bones
around joints, causing arthritis. If in the skull and the temporal bone
(the bone surrounding the inner ear), Paget's disease can affect
hearing. When it affects the facial bones, it can cause dental problems.
Because of changes to the bone, pagetic bones often
contain more blood vessels than normal, increasing blood flow to
affected bones. Because the heart has to work harder to pump the extra
blood, Paget's patients with heart disease may be at even greater risk
for heart failure.
Paget's disease is rarely fatal. However, fewer than 1
percent of patients may develop osteosarcoma, a form of bone cancer, and
other sarcomas. Most Paget's patients die from causes unrelated to
Paget's disease.
Causes
No one knows what causes Paget's disease, although
genetics may play a role. Several studies indicate that 15 to 30 percent
of Paget's patients have family members with the disease. Those with a
first-degree relative--parent, sibling or child--with Paget's disease
are seven times more likely to develop the disease than those without an
affected first-degree relative.
"It clearly runs in families," says Ethel
Siris, M.D., an endocrinologist at Columbia University College of
Physicians and Surgeons in New York City. She says the risk increases if
the first-degree relative has more severe disease and an early age at
diagnosis. Paget's disease is rarely diagnosed in people under 40,
although there have been cases. Siris says she's treated patients in
their late 20s and early 30s.
The family history related by several patients seems
to bear out Siris' conclusions: Evelyn Nef, 83, of Washington, D.C., who
was diagnosed with Paget's disease in 1962, says her brother and sister
also suffer from the disease. Halstead, who was diagnosed in his 30s,
says his two brothers have the disease and his mother, who is 102, was
diagnosed three years ago.
The role of genetics also is supported by observations
that certain ethnic groups have higher rates of Paget's disease.
According to the Paget Foundation, Paget's disease is most common in
Caucasian people of Anglo-Saxon and European descent, but it also occurs
in African Americans. It is rare in people of Asian descent.
Research by Frederick Singer, M.D., an endocrinologist
with the John Wayne Cancer Institute at Saint John's Hospital and Health
Center in Santa Monica, Calif., may eventually yield proof of a genetic
role. Studying an Iowa family with a history of Paget's disease, Singer
and his colleagues traced a genetic abnormality to chromosome 18. The
precise gene has yet to be identified, Singer says, but when it is,
genetic tests may be able to predict who will get the disease. "I
think that's coming pretty fast," he says.
Many experts, Singer included, also suspect that a
slow virus may play a role. The theory is that the virus infects a
person early in life, without causing symptoms for many years. This
theory is based on studies identifying viral-like particles in
osteoclasts from pagetic bone. According to Sakamuri Reddy, Ph.D.,
assistant professor at the University of Texas Health Science Center at
San Antonio, these particles react with antibodies that detect a group
of viruses which includes the measles and canine distemper viruses.
Reddy and his group also have shown that osteoclasts from patients with
Paget's disease contain the measles virus messenger RNA. Osteoclasts of
people without Paget's disease do not contain this RNA.
This isn't to say that measles is the cause, though,
says Leo Lutwak, M.D., Ph.D., an endocrinologist and medical reviewer in
FDA's division of metabolism and endocrine drug products. "The
agent may be related to the measles virus," he says.
How do the viral theory and genetics' role fit
together? Experts in Paget's disease surmise that heredity may put
people at risk for the suspected Paget's virus.
"It may be that some people inherit the tendency
to have this virus affect their osteoclasts, while other people are, due
to their own genetic makeup, more resistant," Siris writes in the
Paget Foundation publication A Patient's Guide to Paget's Disease of
Bone.
Accidental Diagnoses
Many patients, especially those with mild cases, first
learn they have Paget's disease when a routine blood test reveals an
abnormally high blood level of total alkaline phosphatase, an enzyme
produced by osteoblasts, as well as cells of the intestine and liver.
When osteoblasts are more numerous or are especially
active, the amount of alkaline phosphatase throughout the skeleton is
increased. The increased bone alkaline phosphatase spills over into the
blood, increasing the serum alkaline phosphatase.
A normal serum alkaline phosphatase ranges from 20 to
141 units per liter (U/L). Patients with severe Paget's disease may have
six to 10 times that range. Halstead recalls that at one point his serum
alkaline phosphatase rose to nearly 2,000 U/L. Jan Brown of Rockville
recalls her alkaline phosphatase was more than 1,000 U/L when she was
first diagnosed. "The doctor said he had never seen such a high
alkaline phosphatase in as young a person," recalls Brown, who was
52 when diagnosed with Paget's disease.
Sometimes, Paget's patients first learn about their
diagnosis when an x-ray taken for other reasons reveals pagetic bone.
Usually, bone pain is the first complaint of patients
with symptoms. Bone deformities, arthritic pain, and hearing loss are
other complaints that may lead patients to seek medical attention.
Laboratory tests, such as the serum alkaline
phosphatase and urinary hydroxyproline (a measure of bone breakdown),
may offer evidence of Paget's disease, but x-rays give the definitive
diagnosis. Bone scans also may be taken to determine the extent and
activity of Paget's disease. Bone scans involve less radiation and are
more sensitive than x-rays in detecting areas of pagetic bone.
Treatments
Safe drugs for treating Paget's disease of bone became
available only in the last 25 years. FDA approved the first two,
calcitonin and Didronel (etidronate disodium), in the mid-1970s.
Salmon calcitonin (Calcimar and Miacalcin) and human
calcitonin (Cibacalcin) are synthetic substances similar to the human
hormone calcitonin. Synthetic calcitonin preparations help inhibit bone
breakdown by decreasing the activity of osteoclasts. Only injectable
calcitonin is approved for patients with Paget's disease, although
nasal-spray calcitonin, which is approved for other uses, is under study
for Paget's disease also, according to the Paget Foundation.
Didronel is taken orally in the middle of a four-hour
fast. It is a bisphosphonate, a class of drugs that slows bone turnover.
Two newer bisphosphonates, Aredia (pamidronate
disodium for injection) and Fosamax (alendronate sodium tablets), appear
to achieve more effective results--as measured by laboratory
tests--according to studies, and usually in smaller doses because they
are more potent. Aredia, approved by FDA in October 1991, is given
intravenously over four hours daily for three consecutive days.
Fosamax, approved by FDA in October 1995, is taken
orally. Because this medicine is poorly absorbed, patients should take
Fosamax with a glass of water first thing in the morning, then wait at
least 30 minutes before taking other medications, eating, or drinking
anything other than water. Also, to help prevent esophageal irritation
and to ease delivery of the medicine to the stomach, patients should
drink a glass of water and not lie down for at least 30 minutes after
taking Fosamax.
In clinical studies, patients receiving Fosamax had a
20 to 25 percent greater drop in serum alkaline phosphatase levels than
those receiving Didronel. The drop was up to 65 percent greater compared
with placebo, which had little effect on alkaline phosphatase levels.
Bone tissue studies indicated that normal bone was produced during
treatment with Fosamax, even where preexisting bone had the abnormally
disorganized pattern characteristic of Paget's disease.
Fosamax and Didronel usually are taken for no longer
than six months at a time. If symptoms worsen or laboratory tests
indicate a worsening of the disease, the drugs may be restarted after at
least a six-month break from the medications.
Additional Therapies
According to the Paget Foundation, several more
bisphosphonate drugs are undergoing clinical tests. These drugs may
offer greater ease of use, says Charlene Waldman, executive director of
the Paget Foundation.
Because new bone formation occurs as part of the
process of repair in pagetic bone, it is important that along with
calcitonin and the bisphosphonates to inhibit abnormal bone breakdown,
patients eat a diet that provides 1,000 to 1,500 milligrams of calcium
and 400 International Units of vitamin D daily. These nutrients are
needed for proper bone formation.
Calcium can be obtained by eating a well-balanced diet
that includes foods that are good sources of calcium--for example, milk
and milk products, dark-green leafy vegetables (such as mustard greens
and kale), and canned fish with soft bones (such as sardines and
salmon). Dietary supplements of calcium may be another source.
Some Paget's patients, especially those with severe
bowing of legs, fractures, and degenerative arthritis, may need splints,
braces, and other devices such as canes and walkers. Patients also may
receive physical therapy.
Although uncommon, surgery may be required, especially
in cases of fractured bones, severe arthritis, and progressive deformity
of leg bones.
Exercise is important for patients with Paget's
disease, just as it is for everyone. Because patients with Paget's
disease are prone to bone fractures, they should consult their doctors
or physical therapists before starting an exercise program.
Various laboratory tests monitor the progression of
Paget's disease. The most common is the total alkaline phosphatase. FDA
has cleared two tests--Hybritech Ostase in 1994 and Metra Alkphase-B in
1995--that measure only the alkaline phosphatase from bone, since the
enzyme in the blood can come from other organs, too.
A possible future test, which is still under research,
would measure osteocalcin, a byproduct of osteoblasts, to determine bone
turnover rates.
Deciding When to Treat
For many years, doctors generally treated patients
with Paget's disease only if they had symptoms. In recent years, with
the availability of a wider range of drugs, doctors have begun treating
patients without symptoms, as well, hoping that the drugs may prevent
the effects of Paget's disease. Factors to consider in deciding whether
to treat patients without symptoms, according to Siris, are the location
of the disease and the likelihood of its progression. Diseased bone near
joints, in the spine or skull, or in the leg bones are particularly
"bad spots," she says, and may indicate the need for drug
therapy.
Patients who are told they have Paget's disease may
want to seek a medical specialist in that condition. The Paget
Foundation recommends endocrinologists (doctors who specialize in
hormonal and metabolic disorders) or rheumatologists (doctors who
specialize in joint and muscle disorders). Orthopedic doctors (who
specialize in bone problems), neurologists (doctors who specialize in
nerve disorders), and otolaryngologists (eye, ear, nose, and throat
specialists) also may be called on to evaluate specific symptoms.
Siris and Michael McClung, M.D., an endocrinologist
and director of the Oregon Osteoporosis Center in the Oregon Health
Sciences University in Portland, say that too often doctors who aren't
specialists in the disease fail to follow up on laboratory tests or
x-rays that indicate Paget's disease. "They might tell patients:
'Forget about it. You'll just end up in a wheelchair,'" Siris says.
She believes that many doctors aren't aware of current treatments
because effective drugs for Paget's disease weren't available when they
were trained.
Since Paget's disease often runs in families, medical
experts recommend that people with a family history of Paget's disease
have their serum alkaline phosphatase measured after age 40, since the
disease rarely shows up in people under 40. The laboratory test can be
done as part of the routine medical exam.
With prompt medical attention and treatment, when
needed, people with Paget's disease may be able to avoid some of the
disease's serious, often painful effects.
Maryland resident Brown hopes that will be true for
her. "[The disease] is foremost in my mind," she says. "I
wonder: 'Am I going to suffer any deformities from this?' I don't know.
But I must be treated or so many things could happen." |