RMD Open (Aug 2023)

Disease-modifying interactions between chronic kidney disease and osteoarthritis: a new comorbid mouse model

  • Susan Smith,
  • Christopher B Little,
  • Aiken Dao,
  • Sohel M Julovi,
  • Katie Trinh,
  • Alexandra K O’Donohue,
  • Cindy Shu,
  • Meena Shingde,
  • Aaron Schindeler,
  • Natasha M Rogers

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/rmdopen-2023-003109
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3

Abstract

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Objective The prevalence of comorbid chronic kidney disease (CKD) and osteoarthritis (OA) is increasing globally. While sharing common risk factors, the mechanism and consequences of concurrent CKD-OA are unclear. The aims of the study were to develop a preclinical comorbid model, and to investigate the disease-modifying interactions.Methods Seventy (70) male 8–10 week-old C57BL/6 mice were subjected to 5/6 nephrectomy (5/6Nx)±destabilisation of medial meniscus (DMM) or sham surgery. OA pathology and CKD were assessed 12 weeks postinduction by blinded histology scoring, micro-CT, immunohistochemistry for osteoclast and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-13 activity, and serum analysis of bone metabolic markers.Results The 5/6Nx model recapitulated characteristic features of CKD, with renal fibrosis and deranged serum alkaline phosphatase, calcium and phosphate. There was no histological evidence of cartilage pathology induced by 5/6Nx alone, however, synovial MMP-13 expression and subchondral bone osteoclastic activity were increased (p<0.05), with accompanying reductions (p<0.05) in subchondral trabecular bone, bone volume and mineral density. DMM significantly (p<0.05) increased tibiofemoral cartilage damage, subchondral bone sclerosis, marginal osteophytes and synovitis, in association with increased cartilage and synovial MMP-13. DMM alone induced (p<0.05) renal fibrosis, proteinuria and increased (p<0.05) 5/6Nx-induced serum urea. However, DMM in 5/6Nx-mice resulted in significantly reduced (p<0.05) cartilage pathology and marginal osteophyte development, in association with reduced subchondral bone volume and density, and inhibition of 5/6Nx-induced subchondral bone osteoclast activation.Conclusion This study assessed a world-first preclinical comorbid CKD-OA model. Our findings demonstrate significant bidirectional disease-modifying interaction between CKD and OA.