ATLANTA — A retrospective analysis of data from nearly 4,000 patients treated with intravenous bisphosphonates suggests that osteonecrosis of the jaw in patients with metastatic cancer is an important but rare event in these patients, Dr. Ana O. Hoff reported in a poster at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
Reports of an association between bisphosphonate treatment and osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ) in patients with metastatic bone disease prompted this study examining the frequency of and risk factors for ONJ, explained Dr. Hoff of the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston.
The cohort studied included patients treated from September 1996 to February 2004. The most common diagnoses were breast cancer and multiple myeloma, and the indications for intravenous bisphosphonate treatment included metastatic bone disease, hypercalcemia, and osteoporosis.
ONJ, which developed in 29 patients (0.73% overall, including about 1% of breast cancer patients and 2% of multiple myeloma patients), was defined as exposed nonhealing bone of at least 3 months' duration.
Mean cumulative doses of the bisphosphonates used (pamidronate and zoledronate) were significantly higher, and duration of disease and follow-up were significantly longer, in ONJ patients than in those who didn't develop ONJ.
Dental extractions, estrogen-receptor-positive tumors, and treatment with pamidronate and zoledronate were shown to be significant risk factors for ONJ in breast cancer patients. In multiple myeloma patients, significant risk factors were dental extractions, periodontal disease, and osteoporosis.
About 70% of ONJ patients reported no pain with bone exposure, Dr. Hoff noted.
Management of ONJ included aggressive oral hygiene, oral rinses, debridement of necrotic bone, and antibiotic therapy. Of 15 ONJ patients followed longer than 6 months, 1 healed, 1 improved, 1 remained stable, and 9 experienced disease progression.
Race May Be ONJ Risk
White cancer patients on intravenous bisphosphonate therapy for bone metastases may be at higher risk for osteonecrosis of the jaw, Dr. Tamer Aiti reported in a poster at the meeting.
A retrospective study by Dr. Aiti and colleagues at John H. Stroger Jr. Cook County Hospital, Chicago, found that 6 of 161 patients with metastatic breast cancer developed this rare complication in the mandible bone. Five of the six patients were white. Yet whites accounted for less than a third of the population reviewed. All but 29 patients were nonwhite.
The investigators calculated that white patients had significantly more bisphosphonate infusions, 21 on average, compared with a mean of 13.5 infusions in nonwhite patients.
The patients were treated with zoledronic acid and/or pamidronate between Jan. 1, 2001, and Oct. 30, 2005. None had prior glucocorticosteroid therapy.
Dr. Aiti of the department of surgical oncology at the University of Illinois at Chicago, called for larger studies to consider not only race, but also confounding variables such as type of bisphosphonate therapy and cumulative dose, as well as other possible risk factors.