Abstract
Bone disease (BD) is the hall-mark clinical feature of multiple myeloma (MM), accounting up to 60% of patients with bone pain at diagnosis and 60% with a pathologic fracture during the course of their disease. Experimental models, which recapitulate in vivo the human bone marrow microenvironment (HBMM) in immunodeficient mice have been recently developed as valuable tool for the study of MM pathophysiology as well as the experimental treatment of BD. At present, bisphosphonates are the mainstay treatment of MM-related BD. The growing information on the cellular and molecular bases of BD as well as the availability of novel anti-resorptive agents, such as the IgG1-anti-RANKL (AMG 161) Denosumab, are now depicting a new scenario where the treatment will be afforded by the use of different agents. Furthermore the availability of highthroughput molecular profiling approaches, including DNA microarrays and proteomics, is likely to provide new platforms for patients stratification and treatment individualization on specific targets. It is now the right time for a therapeutical approach which is rationally based on the complexity of the biopathology of MMrelated BD.
Current Cancer Drug Targets
Title: Challenging the Current Approaches to Multiple Myeloma-Related Bone Disease: From Bisphosphonates to Target Therapy
Volume: 9 Issue: 7
Author(s): P. Tassone, P. Tagliaferri, M. Rossi, T. Calimeri, A. Bulotta, A. Abbruzzese, M. Caraglia and P. Neri
Affiliation:
Abstract: Bone disease (BD) is the hall-mark clinical feature of multiple myeloma (MM), accounting up to 60% of patients with bone pain at diagnosis and 60% with a pathologic fracture during the course of their disease. Experimental models, which recapitulate in vivo the human bone marrow microenvironment (HBMM) in immunodeficient mice have been recently developed as valuable tool for the study of MM pathophysiology as well as the experimental treatment of BD. At present, bisphosphonates are the mainstay treatment of MM-related BD. The growing information on the cellular and molecular bases of BD as well as the availability of novel anti-resorptive agents, such as the IgG1-anti-RANKL (AMG 161) Denosumab, are now depicting a new scenario where the treatment will be afforded by the use of different agents. Furthermore the availability of highthroughput molecular profiling approaches, including DNA microarrays and proteomics, is likely to provide new platforms for patients stratification and treatment individualization on specific targets. It is now the right time for a therapeutical approach which is rationally based on the complexity of the biopathology of MMrelated BD.
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Tassone P., Tagliaferri P., Rossi M., Calimeri T., Bulotta A., Abbruzzese A., Caraglia M. and Neri P., Challenging the Current Approaches to Multiple Myeloma-Related Bone Disease: From Bisphosphonates to Target Therapy, Current Cancer Drug Targets 2009; 9 (7) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/156800909789760393
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/156800909789760393 |
Print ISSN 1568-0096 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 1873-5576 |
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