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Bisphosphonates Effects On Alveolar Bone Among Osteoporotic Women

The Effect of Orally Administered Bisphosphonates in the Treatment of Osteoporosis on the Alveolar Bone Using Panoramic and Cone-Beam CT Imaging: A Case-control Study

Status
Completed
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02115490
Enrollment
60
Registered
2014-04-16
Start date
2014-04-30
Completion date
2015-09-30
Last updated
2015-09-29

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Osteoporosis

Keywords

Alveolar bone, Bisphosphonates, Cone-beam CT, Osteoporosis

Brief summary

Osteoporosis is a public health problem. It is a skeletal disease being treated by Bisphosphonates as the first choice medication. The effects of these drugs were investigated for periodontal disease treatment both locally and systemically. However, it is very important to know their indirect effects on alveolar bone (i.e. their effects when used for treating osteoporosis). So, in this study, alternations that involve the alveolar bone when osteoporotic women use bisphosphonates will be studied radiologically using cone-beam CT and digital panoramic radiography. The goal is to provide dentists with information about changes in the characterization of the alveolar bone among these women. This is important for both periodontology and implantology. Maxillary and mandibular bone structural characterization among osteoporotic women had not been studied before. Furthermore, in an opposite direction, dental radiographs may aid in detecting osteoporosis. Osteoporotic women, under bisphosphonates therapy or not, will be invited to participate in this study. In addition, osteopenic and normal women regarding bone fragility will be included too, for comparison purposes. Panoramic radiographs will be taken. In addition, women under bisphosphonates for 6 months or more will be scanned by Cone -beam CT as it can give an idea about bone histomorphometry with a low radiation dose.

Detailed description

Osteoporosis is a skeletal disease characterized by a low bone mass, deterioration of the bone structure and an increased risk of bone fracture. Although jaws are not at risk of fracture, they revealed changes due to the disease. Bisphosphonates are the most common medical therapy for osteoporosis as they improve bone structure and reduce its absorption. From a periodontal point of view, it was suggested as an adjunctive therapy for periodontal bone loss. Controversy exists regarding their effects, however. In addition, their effects on the periodontal status and jaw bones are unknown when these drugs are prescribed for treating osteoporosis, i.e. not for periodontal purposes. It is also unknown whether their effects on alveolar bone, if any, can be detected by simple radiographs (such as panoramic radiographs) or required advanced techniques (e.g. Cone-beam CT). In this study, their effects on alveolar bone are going to be evaluated using panoramic radiography and Cone-beam CT, as well as the clinical parameters of periodontal diseases. Cone-beam CT will also offer a way to compare bone histomorphometry of the jaws between groups. Bisphosphonates will be prescribed by physicians of osteoporotic women. The investigators will not interfere drug administration at all. Thus, the investigators can test their indirect effect on jaw bones. Osteoporotic women, who used bisphosphonates for 6 months minimum, will be invited to participate in this investigation. In addition, women with osteoporosis who are not under one of the bisphosphonates will be invited too, as a control. Control group will also include a number of osteopenic and normal women for comparison purposes, as these medications are not indicated for them. Women should be free of bone diseases other than osteoporosis or osteopenia. On panoramic radiographs, radiographic bone density and mandibular cortical index will be assessed. Aluminum step-wedge will be used with panoramic radiography as it offers more accurate density measurements. In Cone-beam CT, radiographic density, apparent bone histomorphometric analysis and radiographic parameters of the periodontal disease will be assessed. Clinical measurements of periodontal disease will be recorded for two purposes. First, to adjust for the confounding factor (periodontal disease) when evaluating the trabecular bone between groups. Second, to test if using these drugs improve the periodontal status as their benefits are still controversial.

Interventions

Sponsors

Damascus University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
CASE_CONTROL
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Age
45 Years to 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Women with osteoporosis who already use bisphosphonates. * Women with osteoporosis who are not under bisphosphonates yet, or are not indicated for such therapy. * Women with osteopenia either using or not bisphosphonates.

Exclusion criteria

* Women with bone diseases other than osteoporosis or osteopenia

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
3D-based Alveolar bone radiographic densityOne-time assessment; once the woman is scanned by CBCTBone radiographic density will be assessed using special software of cone beam CT

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Alveolar bone histomorphometryOne-time assessment; once the patient is scanned by CBCTBone histomorphometry will be assessed using special software used primarily with Micro-CT scans
2D-based Alveolar bone radiographic densityOne-time assessment; once the patient is radiographedThis will be assessed using conventional panoramic radiographs
Periodontal Disease Index (PDI)One-time assessment in the day of performing the X-ray imaging

Countries

Syria

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026