Dear Editor,

Elderly rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients suffer from osteoporosis resulting in fragility fractures [1]. Therapy with low-dose glucocorticoids, which are often used to treat RA, suppresses bone strength. However, evidence regarding the effects of treatment for osteoporosis in RA patients remains limited. Ebina and colleagues [2] conducted an 18-month prospective trial of daily teriparatide (TPTD) in patients with RA and postmenopausal osteoporosis. Their findings showed the advantage of TPTD in the RA patients, compared to that observed in the subjects with primary osteoporosis, and identified available predictors of TPTD treatment in the setting of RA. Their findings provide several significant messages for clinicians. In the current article, I would like to discuss this topic from the point of view of a marker of bone formation, undercarboxylated osteocalcin (ucOC).

It has previously been reported that the serum ucOC level is elevated by TPTD treatment in RA patients [3]. In addition, serum ucOC level and daily glucocorticoid dose are inversely correlated in RA patients treated with teriparatide [3]. The serum ucOC levels in RA patients receiving more than 10 mg per day of prednisolone are often undetectable on an electrochemiluminescence immunoassay. We recently administered TPTD treatment in a small number of RA patients and followed the BMD and serum ucOC levels for 48 weeks (n = 34, mean age 74.6 years). Based on our preliminary data, the percent change from baseline in the LS BMD at 48 weeks positively correlated with the absolute change from baseline in ucOC at 24 weeks (rs = 0.389, p = 0.025). These results are consistent with the observations noted by Ebina and colleagues [2]. Therefore, we agree with the suggestion that the serum ucOC level has the potential to be a useful predictor of TPTD treatment in RA patients.

Nevertheless, it is unknown whether the ucOC level is a suitable biomarker for TPTD treatment in all types of glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis (GIO). As noted above, high-dose prednisolone treatment may make the serum ucOC level undetectable. Therefore, further research is needed to clarify the relationship between ucOC and TPTD treatment in RA and GIO patients.