| Literature DB >> 23049278 |
Abstract
Patients with bone metastases are at risk of skeletal-related events such as pathologic fractures, spinal cord compression, the need for orthopedic surgery to bone, and palliative radiotherapy for severe bone pain. Antiresorptive therapies have demonstrated efficacy for reducing the risk of skeletal-related events and ameliorating bone pain. Despite the well documented clinical benefits of antiresorptive therapies, patient benefits can be limited or compromised by nonadherence with scheduled therapy. Potential reasons for poor compliance include lack of understanding of how antiresorptive therapies work, neglecting the importance of bone health in maintaining quality of life, and being unaware of the potentially debilitating effects of skeletal-related events caused by bone metastases. Indeed, patients may stop therapy after bone pain subsides or discontinue due to generally mild and usually manageable adverse events, leaving them at an increased risk of developing skeletal-related events. In addition, the cost of antiresorptive therapy can be a concern for many patients with cancer. Medical care for patients with cancer requires a coordinated effort between primary care physicians and oncologists. Patients' medical care teams can be leveraged to help educate them about the importance of adherence to antiresorptive therapy when cancer has metastasized to bone. Because primary care physicians generally have more contact with their patients than oncologists, they are in a unique position to understand patient perceptions and habits that may lead to noncompliance and to help educate patients about the benefits and risks of various antiresorptive therapies in the advanced cancer setting. Therefore, primary care physicians need to be aware of various mechanistic and clinical considerations regarding antiresorptive treatment options.Entities:
Keywords: antiresorptive therapy; bisphosphonates; bone metastases; cancer; denosumab; zoledronic acid
Year: 2012 PMID: 23049278 PMCID: PMC3459591 DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S33983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Manag Res ISSN: 1179-1322 Impact factor: 3.989
Key antiresorptive therapy clinical trials for prevention of skeletal-related events in advanced cancer
| Antiresorptive therapy | N | Dosing | Comparator | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prostate cancer | ||||
| ZOL | 422 | 4 mg IV q 3–4 wk | Placebo | ↑ Median time to 1st on-study SRE (not reached ZOL vs 321 days placebo; |
| Dmab | 1904 | 120 mg SC q 4 wk | ZOL 4 mg IV q 4 wk | Additional 18% ↑ in time to 1st on-study SRE ( |
| Breast cancer | ||||
| ZOL | 227 | 4 mg IV q 3–4 wk | Placebo | 41% ↓ in SRE risk ( |
| Dmab | 2046 | 120 mg SC q 4 wk | ZOL 4 mg IV q 4 wk | Additional 18% ↑ in time to 1st on-study SRE ( |
| PAM | 751 | 90 mg IV q 3–4 wk | Placebo | 23% ↓ in SRE risk ( |
| Ibandronate | 312 | 6 mg IV q 3–4 wk | Placebo | 18% ↓ in SRE risk ( |
| Ibandronate | 564 | 50 mg PO qd | Placebo | 14% ↓ in SRE risk ( |
| CLO | 422 | 1600 mg PO qd | Placebo | 31%, 17%, 8% ↓ in SRE risk respectively ( |
| Other solid tumors or multiple myeloma | ||||
| ZOL (BC or MM) | 1116 | 4 mg IV q 3–4 wk | PAM 90 mg IV | Additional 20% ↓ in SRE risk ( |
| ZOL (OST) | 507 | 4 mg IV q 3–4 wk | Placebo | ↑ Median time to 1st on-study SRE (236 days ZOL vs 155 days placebo; |
| ZOL (MM) | 1960 | 4 mg IV q 3–4 wk | CLO 1600 mg PO qd | ↓ Proportion of patients with an SRE (27.0% ZOL vs 35.3% CLO; |
| Dmab (OST or MM) | 1776 | 120 mg SC q 4 wk | ZOL 4 mg IV q 4 wk | Additional 16% ↑ in time to 1st on-study SRE ( |
Notes:
n reflects patients in the 4 mg ZOL and placebo groups only;
percentage decrease in SRE risk and P value derived from the Cochrane database meta-analysis;25
n reflects patients in the 4 mg ZOL and 90 mg PAM groups only.
Abbreviations: BC, breast cancer; CLO, clodronate; Dmab, denosumab; IV, intravenous; MM, multiple myeloma; OST, other solid tumors; OS, overall survival; PAM, pamidronate; PFS, progression-free survival; PO, orally; q, every; SC, subcutaneously; SRE, skeletal-related event; ZOL, zoledronic acid; wk, week; vs, versus.
Trials demonstrating anticancer benefits of bisphosphonates
| Study (follow-up) | N | Tumor type | BP | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neoadjuvant setting | ||||
| Neoadjuvant AZURE | 205 | BC | ZOL 4 mg IV q 3–4 wk for 6 doses | ↓ RITS by 44% (27.4 mm vs 15.5 mm; |
| Adjuvant setting | ||||
| Powles et al | 1069 | BC | CLO 1600 mg/d for 2 y | ↑ BMFS (HR = 0.692; |
| Diel et al | 302 | BC | CLO 1600 mg/d for 2 y | ↑ BMFS (92% vs 83%; |
| Saarto et al (5 y) | 299 | BC | CLO 1600 mg/day for 3 y | ↓ OS (70% vs 83%; |
| NSABP-34 | 3323 | BC | CLO 1600 mg/d for 3 yr | No effect on DFS (HR = 0.91; |
| GAIN | 3023 | BC | IBN 50 mg/d for 2 y | No effect on DFS (HR = 0.945; |
| Lin et al | 45 | BC | ZOL 4 mg IV monthly for 2 y | ↓ In persistent DTCs: |
| Solomayer et al | 76 | BC | ZOL 4 mg IV q 4 wk for 2 y | ↓ In persistent DTCs ( |
| Aft et al | 120 | BC | ZOL 4 mg IV q 3 wk for 1 y | ↓ In persistent DTCs (30% vs 47%; |
| Rack et al | 172 | BC | ZOL 4 mg IV q 4 wk for 6 mo | ↓ Proportion with persistent DTCs after ZOL (13% vs 27%; |
| ZO-FAST (36 mo) | 1065 | BC | ZOL 4 mg IV q 6 mo for 5 y; immediate vs delayed | ↑ DFS (HR = 0.588; |
| ABCSG-12 (48 mo) | 1803 | BC | ZOL 4 mg IV | ↑ DFS (HR = 0.64; |
| AZURE (59 mo) | 3360 | BC | ZOL 4 mg IV | No change in DFS in overall population (HR = 0.98; |
| Metastatic setting | ||||
| Mystakidou et al | 40 | Advanced solid tumors (no BM) | ZOL 4 mg IV monthly | ↑ BMFS at 12 mo (60% vs 10%; |
| Zaghloul et al | 40 | Bladder cancer | ZOL 4 mg IV monthly for 6 mo | ↑ 1-y OS (36.3% vs 0%; |
| Zarogoulidis et al | 144 | LC | ZOL 4 mg IV q 21 d | ↑ OS by > 6 mo (578 d vs 384 d; |
| Aviles et al | 94 | MM | ZOL 4 mg IV q 28 d | ↑ 5-y OS (80% vs 46%; |
| MRC Myeloma IX | 1960 | MM | ZOL 4 mg IV q 3–4 wk | ↑ PFS (HR = 0.883; |
Notes:
Postmenopausal women with early-stage endocrine-responsive breast cancer;
premenopausal women with early stage endocrine-responsive BC. Hamilton E, Clay TM, Blackwell KL. New perspectives on zoledronic acid in breast cancer: potential augmentation of anticancer immune response. Cancer Invest. 2011;29(8):533–541. Copyright 2011, Informa Healthcare. Reproduced with permission of Informa Healthcare.55
Abbreviations: BC, breast cancer; BMFI, bone metastasis-free interval; BMFS, bone metastasis-free survival; DFS, disease-free survival; DTC, disseminated tumor cell; EFS, event-free survival; HR, hazard ratio; IBN, ibandronate; I IDFS, invasive disease-free survival; IV, intravenous; LC, lung cancer; MM, multiple myeloma; NBMFI, nonbone metastasis-free interval; OS, overall survival; pCR, pathologic complete response; PFS, progression-free survival; q, every; RITS, residual invasive tumor size; ZOL, zoledronic acid.
American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons recommendations for treatment of osteonecrosis of the jaw
| Stage | Symptoms | Recommended treatment |
|---|---|---|
| At risk | No apparent necrotic bone in patients who have been treated with either oral or intravenous bisphosphonates |
No treatment indicated Patient education |
| 0 | No clinical evidence of necrotic bone, but nonspecific clinical findings and symptoms |
Systemic management, including the use of pain medication and antibiotics |
| 1 | Exposed/necrotic bone in patients who are asymptomatic and have no evidence of infection |
Antibacterial mouth rinse Quarterly clinical follow-up Patient education |
| 2 | Exposed/necrotic bone associated with infection (ie, pain and erythema in the region of exposed bone) |
Symptomatic treatment with broad-spectrum antibiotics Antibacterial mouth rinse Pain control Superficial debridements to relieve soft tissue irritation |
| 3 | Stage 2 symptoms + 1 or more of the following: exposed and necrotic bone extending beyond the region of alveolar bone (ie, inferior border and ramus in the mandible, maxillary sinus and zygoma in the maxilla) resulting in pathologic fracture, extraoral fistula, oral antral/oral nasal communication, or osteolysis extending to the inferior border of the mandible or sinus floor |
Antibacterial mouth rinse Antibiotic therapy and pain control Surgical debridement/resection for longer-term palliation |
Note: Adapted from Ruggiero SL, Dodson TB, Assael LA, Landesberg R, Marx RE, Mehrotra B. American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons. Position paper on bisphosphonate-related osteonecrosis of the jaw – 2009 update. Aust Endod J. 2009;35:119–130. Copyright 2009, with permission from Elsevier.77
Modified bisphosphonate dosing schedules for renal impairment
| Creatinine clearance, mL/min | Dose adjustment | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Pamidronate, mg | Zoledronic acid, mg | Ibandronate, mg | |
| 90–60 | 60–90 | 4 | 6 |
| 60–50 | 60–90 | 3.5 | 6 |
| 50–40 | 60–90 | 3.3 | 4 |
| 40–30 | 60–90 | 3.0 | 4 |
| <30 or patients receiving hemodialysis | Not recommended | Not recommended | 2 or not recommended |
Notes:
Pamidronate formulations: 90 mg/10 mL, 60 mg/10 mL, or 15 mg/5 mL;26,86
zoledronic acid formulation: 4 mg/5 mL;11
ibandronate formulations: 6 mg/6 mL, or 2 mg/2 mL;87
Swiss summary of product characteristics.88 Updated from Launay- Vacher et al86 and printed in Aapro M, Abrahamsson PA, Body JJ, et al. Guidance on the use of bisphosphonates in solid tumours: recommendations of an international expert panel. Ann Oncol. 2008;19(3):420–432, by permission of Oxford University Press.69