In vitro: |
Journal of Bone & Mineral Research, 2010, 9(3):395-400. | Effect of ipriflavone on expression of markers characteristic of the osteoblast phenotype in rat bone marrow stromal cell culture.[Pubmed: 8191934] | The effects of Ipriflavone on cellular proliferation and differentiation of osteoblasts were investigated using stromal cells isolated from the femoral bone marrow of young rats. METHODS AND RESULTS: To induce the formation of mineralized bone-like tissue in vitro, the cells were cultured in the presence of beta-glycerophosphate and dexamethasone. Ipriflavone was added when subculturing was started. After 14 days of culturing with Ipriflavone (10(-7)-10(-5) M), increases in both the alkaline phosphatase activity and the hydroxyproline content per culture dish and a slight decrease in the saturated cell density were observed. Furthermore, continuous treatment with Ipriflavone for 14-33 days resulted in an increase in the area of bone-like mineralized tissue accompanied by an increase in the secretion of osteocalcin. When culture medium lacking dexamethasone was used, rat bone marrow stromal cells neither differentiated into osteoblasts nor formed bone-like tissue, and under these conditions, Ipriflavone had no effect on the proliferation or the phenotypic expression of the cells.
CONCLUSIONS:
These results suggest that Ipriflavone directly stimulates markers of the osteoblast phenotype at a certain stage in bone formation without affecting undifferentiated cells that have not been committed to the osteogenic lineage. |
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In vivo: |
Jama, 2001, 285(11):1482-8. | Ipriflavone in the treatment of postmenopausal osteoporosis: a randomized controlled trial.[Reference: WebLink] | Data on the efficacy and safety of Ipriflavone for prevention of postmenopausal bone loss are conflicting.To investigate the effect of oral Ipriflavone on prevention of postmenopausal bone loss and to assess the safety profile of long-term treatment with Ipriflavone in postmenopausal osteoporotic women.
METHODS AND RESULTS:
Prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 4-year study conducted in 4 centers in Belgium, Denmark, and Italy from August 1994 to July 1998.Four hundred seventy-four postmenopausal white women, aged 45 to 75 years, with bone mineral densities (BMDs) of less than 0.86 g/cm(2).Patients were randomly assigned to receive Ipriflavone, 200 mg 3 times per day (n = 234), or placebo (n = 240); all received 500 mg/d of calcium.Efficacy measures included spine, hip, and forearm BMD and biochemical markers of bone resorption (urinary hydroxyproline corrected for creatinine and urinary CrossLaps [Osteometer Biotech, Herlev, Denmark] corrected for creatinine), assessed every 6 months. Laboratory safety measures and adverse events were recorded every 3 months.Based on intent-to-treat analysis, after 36 months of treatment, the annual percentage change from baseline in BMD of the lumbar spine for Ipriflavone vs placebo (0.1% [95% confidence interval (CI), -7.9% to 8.1%] vs 0.8% [95% CI, -9.1% to 10.7%]; P =.14), or in any of the other sites measured, did not differ significantly between groups. The response in biochemical markers was also similar between groups (eg, for hydroxyproline corrected for creatinine, 20.13 mg/g [95% CI, 18.85-21.41 mg/g] vs 20.67 mg/g [95% CI, 19.41-21.92 mg/g]; P =.96); urinary CrossLaps corrected for creatinine, 268 mg/mol (95% CI, 249-288 mg/mol) vs 268 mg/mol (95% CI, 254-282 mg/mol); P =.81. The number of women with new vertebral fracture was identical or nearly so in the 2 groups at all time points. Lymphocyte concentrations decreased significantly (500/microL (0.5 x 10(9)/L]) in women treated with Ipriflavone. Thirty-one women (13.2%) in the Ipriflavone group developed subclinical lymphocytopenia, of whom 29 developed it during Ipriflavone treatment. Of these, 15 (52%) of 29 had recovered spontaneously by 1 year and 22 (81%) of 29 by 2 years.
CONCLUSIONS:
Our data indicate that Ipriflavone does not prevent bone loss or affect biochemical markers of bone metabolism. Additionally, Ipriflavone induces lymphocytopenia in a significant number of women. |
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