Cancers that grow in bone, such as myeloma and breast cancer metastases, cause devastating osteolytic bone destruction. These cancers hijack bone remodeling by stimulating osteoclastic bone resorption and suppressing bone formation. Currently, treatment is targeted primarily at blocking bone resorption, but this approach has achieved only limited success. Stimulating osteoblastic bone formation to promote repair is a novel alternative approach. We show that a soluble activin receptor type IIA fusion protein (ActRIIA.muFc) stimulates osteoblastogenesis (p
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Chantry, A. D., Heath, D., Mulivor, A. W., Pearsall, S., Baud’Huin, M., Coulton, L., … Croucher, P. (2010). Inhibiting activin-A signaling stimulates bone formation and prevents cancer-induced bone destruction in vivo. Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, 25(12), 2633–2646. https://doi.org/10.1002/jbmr.142
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