| Literature DB >> 35800293 |
Matthew Winter1,2, Rob Coleman2, Jessica Kendall3, Carlo Palmieri4, Chris Twelves5, Sacha Howell6, Iain MacPherson7, Caroline Wilson1, Kash Purohit1, Jacqui Gath8, Christine Taylor8, Richard Eastell2, Geraldine Murden3, Sarah R Brown3, Emma Rathbone9, Janet Brown2.
Abstract
Background: Approximately 70% of patients with metastatic breast cancer (MBC) develop bone metastases. Despite advances in systemic treatment options and the use of bone targeted agents in the management of bone metastases to reduce skeletal morbidity, there remains an unmet need for further treatment options. Radium-223 (Ra223) is an alpha-emitting radiopharmaceutical that is preferentially taken up into bone at sites of increased osteoblastic activity where it emits high-energy, short-range alpha-particles that could provide a targeted anti-tumour effect on bone metastases. Here we evaluate the safety, feasibility and efficacy findings of the combination of Ra223 with capecitabine chemotherapy in patients with MBC with bone involvement.Entities:
Keywords: Bone metastases; Bone turnover markers; Breast cancer; Capecitabine; Radium-223
Year: 2022 PMID: 35800293 PMCID: PMC9253642 DOI: 10.1016/j.jbo.2022.100442
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bone Oncol ISSN: 2212-1366 Impact factor: 4.491
Fig. 1Study schema evaluating capecitabine plus radium-223.
Fig. 2CONSORT flow diagram.
Patient baseline characteristics and delivery of study treatment.
| Capecitabine + Ra223 | Capecitabine | |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years): median (range) | 58 (34–75) | 55 (45–85) |
| Soft tissue metastases | 10 (44%) | 2 (18%) |
| Visceral metastases | 13 (57%) | 9 (82%) |
| No prior chemotherapy for MBC | 12 (52%) | 9 (82%) |
| 1 prior chemotherapy regimen for MBC | 10 (44%) | 1 (9%) |
| 2 prior chemotherapy regimens for MBC | 1 (4%) | 1 (9%) |
| Median number of capecitabine cycles (range) | 8.5 (3–12) | 12 (1–12) |
| Total number of cycles | 197 | 110 |
| Number of cycles with capecitabine at 1000 mg/m2 | 137 (70%) | 81 (74%) |
| Number of patients with permanent capecitabine dose reduction | 11 (48%) | 6 (55%) |
| Number of cycles with delay | 25 (13%) | 13 (12%) |
| Completed all 12 cycles of study treatment | 9 (39%) | 9 (82%) |
| Progressive disease | 12 (52%) | 0 |
| Toxicity | 1 (4%) | 1 (9%) |
| Progressive disease and toxicity | 1 (4%) | 0 |
| Clinician decision | 0 | 1 (9%) |
AEs showing maximum grade (G) experienced, where G0 denotes participant not experiencing event.
| Capecitabine + Ra223 (n = 23) | Capecitabine alone (n = 11) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| G0 | G1 | G2 | G3 | G0 | G1 | G2 | G3 | |
| Most common AEs | ||||||||
| Diarrhoea | 7 (30%) | 14 (61%) | 2 (9%) | 0 | 6 (55%) | 4 (36%) | 1 (9%) | 0 |
| Fatigue | 9 (39%) | 9 (39%) | 5 (22%) | 0 | 3 (27%) | 6 (55%) | 2 (18%) | 0 |
| Nausea | 9 (39%) | 10 (44%) | 4 (17%) | 0 | 6 (55%) | 5 (46%) | 0 | 0 |
| PPE | 8 (35%) | 6 (26%) | 8 (35%) | 1 (4%) | 3 (27%) | 4 (36%) | 4 (36%) | 0 |
| Oral mucositis | 13 (57%) | 8 (35%) | 2 (9%) | 0 | 8 (73%) | 2 (18%) | 1 (9%) | 0 |
| Anorexia | 13 (57%) | 6 (26%) | 4 (17%) | 0 | 8 (73%) | 2 (18%) | 1 (9%) | 0 |
| Haematological AEs | ||||||||
| Anaemia | 21 (91%) | 2(9%) | 0 | 0 | 8 (73%) | 1 (9%) | 2 (18%) | 0 |
| Neutropaenia | 18 (78%) | 0 | 2 (9%) | 3 (13%) | 10 (91%) | 0 | 1 (9%) | 0 |
| Thrombocytopaenia | 21 (91%) | 1 (4%) | 1 (4%) | 0 | 9 (82%) | 1 (9%) | 1 (9%) | 0 |
Bone turnover markers.
| Capecitabine + Ra223 | Capecitabine | |
|---|---|---|
| Median baseline NTX BCE/mmolCr (range) | 16 (7–35) | 17 (7–143) |
| Baseline NTX ≥ 50 BCE/mmolCr | 0/21 (0%) | 2/11 (18%) |
| Median % change from baseline at end of cycle 5, range | +16% (14 available), | −6% (7 available), |
| NTX responder | 3/16 (19%) | 2/8 (25%) |
| Median baseline CTX (range) ng/ml | 0.08 (0.05–0.19) | 0.10 (0.05–0.58) |
| Baseline CTX ≥ 0.15 ng/ml | 2/22 (9%) | 2/11 (18%) |
| Median % change from baseline at end of cycle 5, range | −2% (15 available), | −7% (9 available), |
| CTX responder | 0/18 | 1/10 (10%) |
| Median baseline PINP ng/ml (range) | 48 (8–149) | 109 (26 – 356) |
| PINP ≥ 60 ng/ml | 9/22 (41%) | 8/11 (73%) |
| Median % change from baseline at end of cycle 5, range | −9% (15 available), | −39% (9 available), (-75%, 171%) |
| PINP responder | 7/18 (39%) | 6/10 (60%) |
| Median baseline B-ALP ng/ml (range) | 17.2 (7.2 – 39.4) | 28.6 (12.5 – 63.5) |
| B-ALP ≥ 25 ng/ml | 3/22 (14%) | 5/9 (56%) |
| Median % change from baseline at end of cycle 5, range | −5% (15 available), | +5% (6 available), |
| B-ALP responder | 4/18 (22%) | 2/7 (29%) |
Fig. 3Waterfall plot of NTX percentage change from baseline to end of cycle 5 by treatment received.
Fig. 4Waterfall plot of B-ALP percentage change from baseline to end of cycle 5 by treatment received.