Prostate cancer is the most common type of cancer and the second leading cause of
cancer death among men in the US. It preferentially metastasizes to bone, with up to 90%
of men with metastatic disease having bone metastases. The presence and volume of bone
metastases are associated with worse prognosis and the potential for skeletal
complications, such as pathologic fractures, spinal cord compression, or the need for
surgery or radiotherapy to bone. These skeletal-related events (SREs) collectively
represent a clinically meaningful outcome that is often measured in clinical trials. Up
to one-half of men with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC), the
advanced and often fatal stage of disease, experience SREs, which are associated with
considerable morbidity, decreased survival, and increased health care utilization and
costs. Therefore, understanding strategies to optimize bone health and prevent skeletal
complications remains a critical area of ongoing research and implementing them a
component of high-quality prostate cancer care.Over the past 20 years, 2 bone resorption inhibitors (BRIs) have emerged as
alternatives for the prevention of skeletal complications among men with mCRPC:
zoledronic acid (an intravenous bisphosphonate) and denosumab (a subcutaneous monoclonal
antibody against the receptor activator of nuclear factor κB ligand [RANKL]).
These agents differ mechanistically, with zoledronic acid preferentially inhibiting
osteoclast proliferation and denosumab inhibiting an important factor in osteoclast
maturation. In a placebo-controlled study of 643 men, zoledronic acid decreased the risk
of SREs by 36% and delayed the time to first SRE by 167 days.[1] In a subsequent phase 3 study of 1904 men,
denosumab was superior to zoledronic acid, delaying the time to first SRE by 3.6 months
(hazard ratio [HR], 0.82; 95% CI, 0.71-0.95).[2] Zoledronic acid was more often associated with acute phase
reactions and required monitoring of kidney function; denosumab conferred a higher risk
of hypocalcemia. Rates of osteonecrosis of the jaw were comparably low. International
guidelines endorse the use of either agent for the treatment of men with mCRPC, although
neither agent has independently been associated with an overall survival benefit in a
randomized study, and some argue that the marginal benefit of denosumab must be weighed
against its dramatically higher cost (the annual cost of zoledronic acid is
approximately $140 vs $29 000 for denosumab).[3,4] Moreover, these pivotal
studies were conducted before contemporary drug approvals, including those of
abiraterone acetate, enzalutamide, radium-223, and cabazitaxel, each of which has been
associated with extended survival and reduction in the risk of SREs. Thus, the benefits
of zoledronic acid and denosumab in combination with contemporary drugs for the
treatment of mCRPC remain incompletely understood.Francini et al[5] report the
results of an international, multicenter, retrospective cohort study of men with mCRPC
who initiated abiraterone acetate with prednisone as first-line therapy with or without
the addition of a BRI (zoledronic acid or denosumab). Among 745 men with a median
follow-up of almost 2 years, the authors found an overall survival benefit associated
with the addition of a BRI (zoledronic acid or denosumab) to abiraterone with prednisone
therapy (31.8 months with a BRI vs 23.0 months without a BRI; HR, 0.65; 95% CI,
0.54-0.79; P < .001), a benefit that persisted with
multivariable adjustment and was most pronounced among men with high-volume
disease.[5]How should we interpret the significance of these findings? First, this study
highlights the importance of bone-targeted therapy in current practice for men with
mCRPC and bone metastases. Although data from a randomized study are lacking, multiple
retrospective studies and post hoc analyses of phase 3 studies have suggested that the
addition of a BRI to contemporary therapies for men with mCRPC may prolong survival in
addition to preventing skeletal complications.[6,7] Moreover, this study
supports the hypothesis that BRIs may be particularly important for men with high-volume
metastases,[7] a hypothesis that
warrants prospective testing in future studies.Second, the study by Francini et al[5] exposes real-world practice patterns across 8 major hospital systems
in the US, Europe, and Canada. In a study population encompassing men with mCRPC and
bone metastases for whom bone-targeted therapy is endorsed by international guidelines,
more than 70% of participants were prescribed abiraterone acetate with prednisone alone
and thus did not receive an indicated BRI.[5] This gap is particularly noteworthy given the study's main
finding of improved overall survival with concomitant bone-targeted therapy and
highlights the need for implementation work (such as clinical pathways and behavioral
nudges to promote adoption[4]) to bring
evidence-based therapies to the patients who need them. Moreover, the authors found no
association between the specific bone agent used (zoledronic acid vs denosumab) and
overall survival.[5] Although this
finding must be considered preliminary given the limitations of a retrospective study,
it adds to data suggesting that these agents are comparably beneficial; thus, decisions
between them should focus on clinical factors, such as kidney function, patient
preference, and cost.As the authors admit, an important limitation of their study is its
underrepresentation of patients from racial and ethnic minority groups, who often
present with particularly aggressive prostate cancers and stand to benefit from these
therapies. Although this limitation may, to some extent, reflect the geographic
catchments of the institutions involved in the study, underrepresentation of racial and
ethnic minority groups is endemic in cancer clinical trials, and the pivotal clinical
trials leading to regulatory approvals of zoledronic acid and denosumab are no
exception. A renewed focus on equitable participation in clinical research is
needed.Francini et al[5] should be
commended for assembling a large international contemporary cohort of men with mCRPC to
provide insight into the important challenge of optimizing bone health in this
population. Perhaps what we learned most from this study is that most of the time, men
are not receiving guideline-concordant bone-targeted care. Should they be? The answer is
still yes.
Authors: Samuel U Takvorian; Vrushabh P Ladage; E Paul Wileyto; Drew S Mace; Rinad S Beidas; Lawrence N Shulman; Justin E Bekelman Journal: JAMA Oncol Date: 2020-07-01 Impact factor: 31.777
Authors: Fred Saad; Neal Shore; Hendrik Van Poppel; Dana E Rathkopf; Matthew R Smith; Johann S de Bono; Christopher J Logothetis; Paul de Souza; Karim Fizazi; Peter F A Mulders; Paul Mainwaring; John D Hainsworth; Tomasz M Beer; Scott North; Yves Fradet; Thomas A Griffin; Peter De Porre; Anil Londhe; Thian Kheoh; Eric J Small; Howard I Scher; Arturo Molina; Charles J Ryan Journal: Eur Urol Date: 2015-05-16 Impact factor: 20.096
Authors: Fred Saad; Donald M Gleason; Robin Murray; Simon Tchekmedyian; Peter Venner; Louis Lacombe; Joseph L Chin; Jeferson J Vinholes; J Allen Goas; Ming Zheng Journal: J Natl Cancer Inst Date: 2004-06-02 Impact factor: 13.506
Authors: Edoardo Francini; Francesco Montagnani; Pier Vitale Nuzzo; Miguel Gonzalez-Velez; Nimira S Alimohamed; Pietro Rosellini; Irene Moreno-Candilejo; Antonio Cigliola; Jaime Rubio-Perez; Francesca Crivelli; Grace K Shaw; Li Zhang; Roberto Petrioli; Carmelo Bengala; Guido Francini; Jesus Garcia-Foncillas; Christopher J Sweeney; Celestia S Higano; Alan H Bryce; Lauren C Harshman; Richard Lee-Ying; Daniel Y C Heng Journal: JAMA Netw Open Date: 2021-07-01