Body J J, Mancini I
Department of Medicine, Institut J. Bordet, 1, rue Héger-Bordet, 1000 Bruxelles, Belgium.
Support Care Cancer. 2002 Jul;10(5):399-407. doi: 10.1007/s005200100292. Epub 2001 Oct 19.
Bisphosphonates (BPs) are potent inhibitors of osteoclast-mediated bone resorption, and it is well accepted that tumor cells in bone, especially breast cancer and myeloma cells, can stimulate osteoclast formation and activity leading to the release of growth factors or cytokines, which will further stimulate cancer cells' growth and their secretion of osteolytic factors. BPs are now the standard treatment for cancer hypercalcemia, for which a dose of 90 mg of pamidronate or 1500 mg of clodronate is recommended; the former compound is more potent and has a longer lasting effect. Repeated pamidronate infusions exert clinically relevant analgesic effects in more than half of patients with metastatic bone pain. Recent data suggest that non-responding patients should perhaps be treated with higher doses. The optimal dose actually remains to be defined, especially as it is thought that it is probably a function of the disease stage. Regular pamidronate infusions can also achieve a partial objective response according to conventional UICC criteria and they can almost double the objective response rate to chemotherapy. Lifelong administration of oral clodronate to patients with breast cancer metastatic to bone reduces the frequency of morbid skeletal events by more than one-fourth. Two double-blind randomized placebo-controlled trials comparing monthly 90 mg pamidronate infusions to placebo infusions for 1-2 years in addition to hormone or chemotherapy in patients with at least one lytic bone metastasis have shown that the mean skeletal morbidity rate could be reduced by 30-40%. The results obtained with intravenous BPs are generally viewed as better than those obtained with oral clodronate. However, preference can be given to the oral route when BPs are started early in the process of metastatic bone disease in a patient receiving hormone therapy. According to the recently published ASCO guidelines, pamidronate 90 mg i.v. delivered over 2 h every 3-4 weeks can be recommended in patients with metastatic breast cancer who have imaging evidence of lytic destruction of bone and who are concurrently receiving systemic therapy with hormonal therapy or chemotherapy. Furthermore, the ASCO Panel considered it "reasonable" to start i.v. BPs in women with localized pain whose bone scans were abnormal and plain radiographs normal, but not when an abnormal bone scan is asymptomatic. The pertinence of these criteria is discussed below. Because BPs are providing supportive care, reducing the rate of skeletal morbidity but evidently not abolishing it, the criteria for stopping their administration have to be different from those used for classic antineoplastic drugs, and they should not be stopped when metastatic bone disease is progressing. However, criteria to determine whether and for how long an individual patient benefits from their administration are lacking. New biochemical markers of bone resorption might help identify those patients continuing to benefit from therapy. Even better results have been achieved in patients with multiple myeloma, and the general consensus is that BPs should be started as soon as the diagnosis of lytic disease is made in myeloma patients. On the other hand, data are scanty in prostate cancer, but large-scale trials with potent BPs are ongoing or planned in such patients. Similar results to those achieved with pamidronate have been obtained with monthly 6-mg infusions of the newer BP ibandronate in patients with breast cancer metastatic to bone. The tolerance of ibandronate could be better, and the drug has the potential to be administered as a 15- to 30-min infusion. Zoledronate can also be administered safely as a 15-min 4-mg infusion, and large scale phase III trials have just been completed. These newer BPs will simplify the current therapeutic schemes and improve the cost-effectiveness ratio; they also have the potential to improve the therapeutic efficacy, at least in patients with an aggressive osteolytic disease or when given as adjuvant therapy. For that matter, initial data with clodronate indicate that they have the potential to prevent the development of bone metastases, but the use of BPs in the adjuvant setting must still be viewed as experimental.
双膦酸盐(BPs)是破骨细胞介导的骨吸收的有效抑制剂,人们普遍认为骨中的肿瘤细胞,尤其是乳腺癌和骨髓瘤细胞,可刺激破骨细胞的形成和活性,导致生长因子或细胞因子的释放,这将进一步刺激癌细胞的生长及其溶骨因子的分泌。BPs现在是癌症高钙血症的标准治疗药物,推荐剂量为90mg帕米膦酸或1500mg氯膦酸;前一种化合物效力更强,效果持续时间更长。重复输注帕米膦酸对超过一半的转移性骨痛患者具有临床相关的镇痛作用。最近的数据表明,无反应的患者可能应该用更高的剂量治疗。实际的最佳剂量仍有待确定,特别是因为人们认为它可能是疾病阶段的函数。根据传统的国际抗癌联盟(UICC)标准,定期输注帕米膦酸也可实现部分客观缓解,并且它们可使化疗的客观缓解率几乎翻倍。对骨转移的乳腺癌患者终身口服氯膦酸可将病态骨骼事件的发生率降低超过四分之一。两项双盲随机安慰剂对照试验比较了在至少有一处溶骨性骨转移的患者中,除激素或化疗外,每月输注90mg帕米膦酸与安慰剂1 - 2年,结果表明平均骨骼发病率可降低30 - 40%。静脉注射BPs所获得的结果通常被认为优于口服氯膦酸所获得的结果。然而,当在接受激素治疗的患者的转移性骨病过程早期开始使用BPs时,可优先选择口服途径。根据最近公布的美国临床肿瘤学会(ASCO)指南,对于有溶骨性骨破坏影像学证据且同时接受激素治疗或化疗的全身治疗的转移性乳腺癌患者,可推荐每3 - 4周静脉输注90mg帕米膦酸2小时。此外,ASCO专家组认为,对于骨扫描异常而平片正常但有局部疼痛的女性开始静脉注射BPs是“合理的”,但骨扫描异常且无症状时则不然。以下将讨论这些标准的相关性。因为BPs提供的是支持性治疗,可降低骨骼发病率但显然不能消除它,所以停止给药的标准必须与用于经典抗肿瘤药物的标准不同,并且当转移性骨病进展时不应停止给药。然而,缺乏确定个体患者是否以及从其给药中受益多长时间的标准。新的骨吸收生化标志物可能有助于识别那些继续从治疗中受益的患者。在多发性骨髓瘤患者中已取得了更好的结果,普遍的共识是,一旦骨髓瘤患者诊断为溶骨性疾病就应开始使用BPs。另一方面,前列腺癌的数据很少,但正在对这类患者进行或计划进行使用强效BPs的大规模试验。在骨转移的乳腺癌患者中,每月输注6mg新型BP伊班膦酸已获得与帕米膦酸相似的结果。伊班膦酸的耐受性可能更好,并且该药物有可能在15至30分钟内输注。唑来膦酸也可以安全地作为15分钟4mg的输注给药,并且大规模III期试验刚刚完成。这些新型BPs将简化当前的治疗方案并提高成本效益比;它们也有可能提高治疗效果,至少在患有侵袭性溶骨性疾病的患者中或作为辅助治疗时是这样。就此而言,氯膦酸的初始数据表明它们有可能预防骨转移的发生,但在辅助治疗中使用BPs仍应视为实验性的。