Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.3.16 (calcineurin)
17,112 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report two renal transplant patients who experienced onset of severe bilateral knee pain 1 and 3 months after transplantation, respectively, while on tacrolimus therapy. Tacrolimus, like cyclosporine A, is an immunosuppressive agent that inactivates the enzyme calcineurin phosphatase. A bone pain syndrome was reported in 1989 in organ transplant recipients treated with cyclosporine A. Our cases suggest that tacrolimus may induce the same syndrome. Technetium 99m bone scanning shows increased uptake in the affected areas, and magnetic resonance imaging changes are consistent with bone marrow edema. The tacrolimus dosage need not be reduced unless trough levels are too high. The symptoms resolve completely within a few months. Imaging studies should be done to rule out avascular necrosis. The pathophysiology of this syndrome is discussed. Since tacrolimus was introduced recently, similar cases should be published.
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PMID:Tacrolimus pain syndrome in renal transplant patients: report of two cases. 1505 Feb 4

Osteonecrosis, the calcineurin-inhibitor-induced pain syndrome and transient marrow oedema may occur after renal transplantation, are generally painful and can be diagnosed by X-ray, radionuclide scan or magnetic resonance imaging. They share features of increased intraosseous pressure, compromised vascular supply, marrow oedema and the development of a 'bone compartment syndrome'. Glucocorticoid dosage is the most commonly implicated risk factor for osteonecrosis. Mechanisms may include the differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells to adipocytes causing increased intraosseous pressure and collapse of marrow sinusoids, as well as increased osteoblast and osteocyte apoptosis. Some of these effects may be ameliorated by lipid lowering drugs. Calcineurin-inhibitors, particularly cyclosporine, may increase the risk of osteonecrosis because of vasoconstrictive effects and sirolimus may influence the development of osteonecrosis by potentiating the effects of calcineurin inhibitors or by influencing the lipid profile. For osteonecrosis, early stages are generally managed conservatively or with core decompression sometimes accompanied by bone grafting and more recently the injection of bone morphogenic protein. The use of iloprost to improve blood flow and bisphosphonates and RANK-ligand inhibition to reduce osteoclastic resorption of remaining trabecular structures are as yet unproven strategies. Unfortunately, the rate of total hip arthroplasty remains high. For the calcineurin-inhibitor-induced pain syndrome and transient marrow oedema, calcium channel blockers, the reduction or withdrawal of calcineurin-inhibitors and core decompression have been used. Although a lack of randomized controlled trials makes management decisions difficult, early recognition of these bone pain syndromes affords the best opportunity for avoiding prolonged pain or joint replacement surgery.
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PMID:From marrow oedema to osteonecrosis: common paths in the development of post-transplant bone pain. 1719 98

We report the case of a patient treated with living donor-related liver transplantation who suffered from osteomalacia during adefovir dipivoxil (ADV)-containing antiviral therapy for lamivudine-resistant hepatitis B virus infection. The patient had generalized bone pain, with severe hypophosphatemia after 20 mo of ADV therapy. Radiographic studies demonstrated the presence of osteomalacia. The peak plasma ADV level was 38 ng/mL after administration of ADV at 10 mg/d. It was also found that ADV affected the metabolism of tacrolimus, a calcineurin-inhibitor, and caused an increase in the plasma levels of tacrolimus. The disability was reversed with the withdrawal of ADV and with mineral supplementation. ADV can cause an elevation of plasma tacrolimus levels, which may be associated with renal dysfunction. High levels of ADV and tacrolimus can cause nephrotoxicity and osteomalacia. This case highlights the importance of considering a diagnosis of osteomalacia in liver transplantation recipients treated with both ADV and tacrolimus.
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PMID:Development of osteomalacia in a post-liver transplant patient receiving adefovir dipivoxil. 2119 20

Bone disease remains a major cause of morbidity after renal transplantation. Post-transplant osseous complications include osteoporosis and osteonecrosis, both historically associated with glucocorticoids, and a newer syndrome of bone pain associated with calcineurin inhibitors. Calcineurin inhibitor-induced pain syndrome (CIPS) is a reversible etiology of lower extremity bone pain and bone marrow edema reported in patients receiving cyclosporine or tacrolimus after solid organ or bone marrow transplantation. While the syndrome's pathophysiology is unclear, bone insufficiency and epiphyseal impaction may play a role. We review the literature on this increasingly important post-transplant entity and describe a case illustrating the syndrome's key features.
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PMID:Pain syndrome with stress fractures in transplanted patients treated with calcineurin inhibitors. 2606 40

Rapamycins are immunosuppressant and anti-cancer drugs that inhibit the kinase mTOR. Clinically, they often cause bone pain, bone necrosis, and high bone turnover, yet the mechanisms are unclear. Here we show that mTORC1 activity is high in osteoclast precursors but downregulated upon RANKL treatment. Loss-of-function genetic models reveal that while early Raptor deletion in hematopoietic stem cells blunts osteoclastogenesis due to compromised proliferation/survival, late Raptor deletion in osteoclast precursors instead augments osteoclastogenesis. Gain-of-function genetic models by TSC1 deletion in HSCs or osteoclast precursors cause constitutive mTORC1 activation, impairing osteoclastogenesis. Pharmacologically, rapamycin treatment at low but clinically relevant doses exacerbates osteoclast differentiation and bone resorption, leading to bone loss. Mechanistically, RANKL inactivates mTORC1 via calcineurin-mediated mTORC1 dephosphorylation, consequently activating NFATc1 by reducing mTORC1-mediated NFATc1 phosphorylation. These findings uncover biphasic roles of mTORC1 in osteoclastogenesis, dosage-dependent effects of rapamycin on bone, and a previously unrecognized calcineurin-mTORC1-NFATc1 phosphorylation-regulatory signaling cascade.
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PMID:mTORC1 impedes osteoclast differentiation via calcineurin and NFATc1. 3027 15