| Literature DB >> 33028943 |
Arif Hussain1, Abhishek Tripathi2, Christopher Pieczonka3, Diane Cope4, Andrea McNatty5, Christopher Logothetis6, Theresa Guise7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Osteoporosis is a skeletal disorder characterized by compromised bone strength, resulting in increased fracture risk. Patients with prostate cancer may have multiple risk factors contributing to bone fragility: advanced age, hypogonadism, and long-term use of androgen-deprivation therapy. Despite absence of metastatic disease, patients with nonmetastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer receiving newer androgen receptor inhibitors can experience decreased bone mineral density. A systematic approach to bone health care has been hampered by a simplistic view that does not account for heterogeneity among prostate cancer patients or treatments they receive. This review aims to raise awareness in oncology and urology communities regarding the complexity of bone health, and to provide a framework for management strategies for patients with nonmetastatic castrate-resistant prostate cancer receiving androgen receptor inhibitor treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33028943 PMCID: PMC8134041 DOI: 10.1038/s41391-020-00296-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis ISSN: 1365-7852 Impact factor: 5.455
Fig. 1Adapted from [19] and [20] to show age-related bone loss in men.
Santos et al. [19] is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons CC BY license, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium.
Falls, fractures, and other bone-related AEs in phase 3 trials for ARIs.
| Treatment arm | Placebo arm | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | Drug | Fallsa
| Fractures | Otherb
| Fallsa
| Fractures | Otherb
|
| SPARTAN ( | Apalutamide | 125 (15.6) | 94 (11.7) | NR | 36 (9.0) | 26 (6.5) | NR |
| ARAMIS ( | Darolutamide | 40 (4.2) | 40 (4.2) | 139 (14.6) | 26 (4.7) | 20 (3.6) | 68 (12.2) |
| PROSPER ( | Enzalutamide | 106 (11) | 91 (10) | 73 (8) | 19 (4) | 23 (5) | 33 (7) |
AE adverse event, ARI androgen receptor inhibitor, NR not reported.
aIn SPARTAN, falls were deemed treatment-related by the investigators. In ARAMIS, falls included events recorded as accidents, and were determined to have been accidental falls.
bOther includes back pain in PROSPER, and back pain or pain in an extremity in ARAMIS.
Management strategies.
| Modality | Component | Evidence or comments | Dosing | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Screening | Schedule | 17,017 patients over 3 years showed only a minority were screened for BMD; screening rate varied from 15 to 20%. Those screened were older and fractures, osteoporosis was more common among them. | N/A | [ |
| DEXA | DEXA scores are based on Insurance coverage may limit how often patients undergo screening. For patients ages ≥65 years, Medicare part B insurance may cover DEXA scans every 2 years (or more frequently when prescribed by the physician) if preliminary X-rays show bone loss, or if patients suffered a previous fracture associated with loss of BMD. | N/A | [ | |
| Exercise | High-intensity resistance training | 20 weeks of high-intensity resistance training helped maintain BMD in 10 patients with mCRPC on ADT. | N/A | [ |
| Impact and resistance training vs. stretching | 51 patients with CRPC treated with ADT were assigned to either a year of impact and resistance training or stretching. The men assigned to impact and resistance training showed significantly improved preservation of BMD at the L4 vertebrae (−0.4% for impact and resistance training compared with −3.1% for stretching, | N/A | [ | |
| Sports | 109 patients were randomized to play football for 1 h twice/week, and the same number received usual care. Improvement in hip BMD was seen among patients who participated, but not in spinal BMD ( | N/A | [ | |
| Pharmacotherapy | Denosumab | Denosumab at 60 mg given every 6 months was shown to improve lumbar BMD significantly after 2 years compared with placebo: (+5.6% denosumab vs. −1.0% placebo; treatment difference 6.7% [95% CI 6.2–7.1]; | 60 mg every 6 months by subcutaneous injection | [ |
| Zoledronic acid | Results of a systematic review and meta-analysis spanning the years 1946–2017 showed that zoledronic acid was effective in improving bone health in patients with nmCRPC. | 5 mg IV yearly absent renal dysfunction | [ | |
| Alendronate | Results of a systematic review and meta-analysis of 4 databases spanning the years 1800–2009 [sic] showed that alendronate decreased risk for developing osteoporosis (risk ratio 0.44; 95% CI 0.29–0.67) or fracture (0.51; 95% CI 0.1–2.69) relative to placebo in patients on ADT. | In the studies surveyed: 70 mg once/week per os | [ | |
| Pamidronate | Results of a systematic review and meta-analysis of 4 databases spanning the years 1800–2009 [sic] showed that pamidronate increased lumbar spine (8.65 ± 6.85), total hip (8.65 ± 6.85), and trochanter (3.25 ± 0.63) BMD in patients on ADT after 12 months. | Per Smith et al.: 60 mg every 12 weeks IV | [ | |
| Nutritional supplements | Calcium | Supplementation strongly recommended, especially with ZA or denosumab. To ensure adequate calcium intake, 3 or 4 daily servings of calcium-rich food should be consumed; if the total calcium consumed is <1000 mg to 1300 mg per day, then calcium supplements (600 mg) are advised. The recommended calcium intake for men 51–70 years is 1000 mg/day and for men >71 years, it is 1200 mg/day. If supplements are taken, they should be divided over the course of 3 daily meals for best absorption. | 600 mg advised to reach total recommended Ca intake | [ |
| Vitamin D | Supplementation strongly recommended, especially with ZA or denosumab. Vitamin D levels should be assessed prior to commencing therapy; if levels are <20 ng/mL, supplementation with 3000–5000 IU vitamin D per day for ≥6–12 weeks, followed by 800 IU daily maintenance should be considered. Supplementation should be provided to keep levels between 30 ng/mL and upper limit of normal for respective assay. | 3000 to 5000 IU vitamin D daily for ≥6–12 weeks, followed by 800 IU daily | [ | |
| Protein | ≥1.2 g of high-quality protein per kg body weight daily | N/A | [ | |
| Lifestyle modifications | Caffeine | Limit to ≤400 mg/day | N/A | [ |
| Alcohol | Limit to ≤2 drinks/day | N/A | [ |
ADT androgen-deprivation therapy, BMD bone mineral density, CI confidence interval, CRPC castration-resistant prostate cancer, DEXA dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, HR hazard ratio, IU international units, IV intravenous, NA not applicable, nm nonmetastatic, RR relative risk; SD standard deviation, ZA zoledronic acid.
Comparison of bisphosphonates and denosumab [34].
| Characteristic | Bisphosphonates | Denosumab |
|---|---|---|
| Target | Farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase inhibitors (nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates, e.g., zoledronic acid) | MoAb to RANKL |
| Site of action | Taken up by bone matrix | Systematically on osteoclast formation (blood and extracellular fluid) |
| Structure | Small molecule | MoAb |
| Effect on osteoclasts | Inhibits resorption by osteoclasts; inhibits osteoclast survival by inducing osteoclast apoptosis | Inhibits differentiation of precursors into osteoclasts; inhibits osteoclast function and survival |
| How given | Oral (alendronate) or intravenously (zoledronic acid and pamidronate) | Subcutaneous |
| Clearance from body | Initially cleared by kidney, and long-term via bone remodeling | Cleared via RES (half-life ~26 days) |
| Contraindications | • Pregnancy • Severe renal impairment (see dosing guidelines for individual bisphosphonates) • Hypocalcemia • Hypersensitivity to any component | • Pregnancy • Hypocalcemia • Hypersensitivity to any active component or excipient |
Adapted from [34] with permission.
BMD bone mineral density, MoAb monoclonal antibody, RANKL receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-B ligand, RES reticuloendothelial system.