Abstract

Appropriate follow-up after treatment initiation in patients with osteoporosis is challenging. Serum biomarkers may offer more efficient monitoring of bone mineral density (BMD) than the currently used dual X-ray absorptiometry; however, significant changes in BMD often occur over at least 12 months. During teriparatide treatment for osteoporosis, monitoring with markers such as procollagen type I propeptide (PINP), which is derived from osteoblasts, can provide clinically useful information for disease management. However, rapid and cost-effective methods for detecting serum PINP are lacking, necessitating a point-of-care test (POCT) for enhanced follow-up efficiency in osteoporosis management. For the quantitative detection of PINP, we developed a high-sensitivity lateral flow immunoassay with a stacking pad (sLFIA). We established a calibration equation based on the test line/control line ratio obtained from our PINP sLFIA results of various nonspiked serum samples to calculate the PINP concentrations in 40 serum samples and compared the result with those obtained using a fully automated electrochemiluminescence immunoassay. PINP concentrations between these two methods exhibited excellent correlation (R = 0.991). In addition, we assessed the serum PINP concentrations of patients with osteoporosis treated with teriparatide. At the 3-month follow-up, their PINP levels were nearly twice as high as those at baseline, thus implying that our method can be used for osteoporosis treatment monitoring. Our findings thus indicate that the PINP sLFIA can serve as a POCT for monitoring medication response and managing osteoporosis.

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