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Thursday, August 02, 2001

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New treatment for osteoporosis

BETTER TREATMENTS for osteoporosis could become available in a few years. Many people's bones become weak as they age and their levels of oestrogen or testosterone fall.

The most common treatment is hormone replacement therapy, but this can increases the risk of cancer, with some types of HRT, women are eight times as likely to get womb cancer, for example.

Now Stavros Manolagas and Starvroula Kousteni at the University of Arkansas in Little Rock have created forms of the sex hormones that will keep bone cells alive but shouldn't increase the cancer risk.

This was made possible by their discovery that oestrogen and testosterone can trigger more than one kind of signal in cells.

It was known that when oestrogen binds to receptors in cells, it activates a signal that changes the expression of genes. But the team found that in bone cells, oestrogen can also trigger a signal telling the cells not to commit suicide, prolonging their lives and keeping bone strong.

This signal acts directly rather than through gene expression and is much faster, taking minutes rather than hours. The different signals come from different parts of the molecule, so the team were able to deveop a class of compounds that produce only the fast signal. These drugs should not have undesirable side effects on the reproductive system.

Rats given the new compound show up to a 70 per cent increase in bone strength. Kousteni says it could even strengthen bones in healthy people. The work could also lead to treatments for other hormone related diseases.

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