Kolling Institute, Royal North Shore Hospital, St Leonards, Sydney, Australia.
Curr Med Res Opin. 2010 Mar;26(3):599-604. doi: 10.1185/03007990903512321.
In the BONE study (3 years' duration), daily oral ibandronate 2.5 mg reduced vertebral fracture risk by 62% (vs. placebo; p = 0.0001). In the DIVA study (2 years' duration), i.v. ibandronate 2 mg every 2 months (q2mo) or 3 mg every 3 months (q3mo) was superior to daily oral ibandronate in terms of BMD gains (p < 0.001) and normalisation of bone turnover markers, suggesting potential antifracture efficacy with the licensed i.v. regimen (3 mg q3mo). To evaluate this, a post-hoc analysis of non-vertebral fracture incidence was performed using DIVA study individual patient data.
Both i.v. doses had the same annual cumulative exposure (ACE) - 12 mg. Therefore, data for these two regimens were pooled. This higher dose was compared with 2.5 mg daily oral ibandronate (ACE 5.5 mg) to maintain trial randomisation. Osteoporotic non-vertebral fractures were captured as a secondary endpoint. Time-to-event analysis was conducted using Kaplan-Meier methodology; hazard ratios (HRs) were derived from a Cox model with adjustments for clinical fracture, age and BMD. The DIVA trial was not primarily designed to assess fracture efficacy.
The rate of non-vertebral fractures was significantly reduced when ibandronate ACE 12 mg (3 mg q3mo and 2 mg q2mo i.v.) was compared with ACE 5.5 mg (2.5 mg daily oral). The non-vertebral fracture incidence was 3.1% versus 4.8%, respectively, representing a 43% relative risk reduction with i.v. ibandronate (p = 0.0489; adjusted HR 0.569 [95% confidence interval: 0.324, 0.997]). Time to non-vertebral fracture was also extended for high- versus low-dose ibandronate (p = 0.048).
A significant effect on non-vertebral fracture risk reduction was seen when high i.v. ibandronate doses were compared with a lower oral dose. This post-hoc analysis indicates greater antifracture efficacy for the licensed quarterly i.v. regimen versus daily oral dosing.
在 BONE 研究(持续 3 年)中,每日口服伊班膦酸钠 2.5mg 可使椎体骨折风险降低 62%(安慰剂;p=0.0001)。在 DIVA 研究(持续 2 年)中,静脉注射伊班膦酸钠 2mg,每 2 个月(q2mo)或每 3 个月(q3mo)优于每日口服伊班膦酸钠,在 BMD 增加方面(p<0.001)和骨转换标志物的正常化方面,表明许可的静脉注射方案(3mg q3mo)具有潜在的抗骨折疗效。为了评估这一点,使用 DIVA 研究的个体患者数据进行了非椎体骨折发生率的事后分析。
两种静脉剂量的年累积暴露量(ACE)相同-12mg。因此,对这两种方案的数据进行了汇总。将更高的剂量与每日口服伊班膦酸钠 2.5mg(ACE 5.5mg)进行比较,以维持试验随机分组。骨质疏松性非椎体骨折被捕获为次要终点。使用 Kaplan-Meier 方法进行生存时间分析;风险比(HRs)来自 Cox 模型,该模型对临床骨折、年龄和 BMD 进行了调整。DIVA 试验并非主要设计用于评估骨折疗效。
与 ACE 5.5mg(每日口服伊班膦酸钠 2.5mg)相比,当伊班膦酸钠 ACE 12mg(3mg q3mo 和 2mg q2mo 静脉注射)时,非椎体骨折的发生率显著降低。非椎体骨折的发生率分别为 3.1%和 4.8%,静脉注射伊班膦酸钠的相对风险降低了 43%(p=0.0489;调整后的 HR 0.569[95%置信区间:0.324,0.997])。与低剂量伊班膦酸钠相比,高剂量伊班膦酸钠也延长了非椎体骨折的时间(p=0.048)。
当高剂量静脉注射伊班膦酸钠与低剂量口服药物相比时,非椎体骨折风险降低的效果显著。这项事后分析表明,许可的每季度静脉注射方案与每日口服剂量相比具有更大的抗骨折疗效。