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Showing posts with label zometa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zometa. Show all posts

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Final Follow-Up of Z-FAST Study Shows Zoledronic Acid May Benefit Postmenopausal Woman with Aromatase Inhibitor-Associated Bone Loss

Zoledronic acid is both safe and effective in preventing bone loss in postmenopausal women with breast cancer who are treated with aromatase inhibitors, according to data presented at the CTRC-AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

 "Women who take aromatase inhibitors need some sort of bone protection, and this five-year data show that zoledronic acid is a viable option," said Adam Brufsky, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor of medicine, associate chief of hematolgy-oncology, and associate director for clinical investigation, University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute.

Brufsky estimates that between 20,000 to 30,000 women a year will benefit from this therapy and that number is growing. Anastrozole, currently sold as Arimidex by AstraZeneca, is scheduled to go off patent within the next few years.

"Women who are on Medicare tend to go with tamoxifen because the cost of anastrozole puts them squarely in the donut hole of Medicare Part D, but once the cost barrier is removed there will likely be a mass switch to the aromatase inhibitor, which will necessitate the need for bone protection," said Brufsky.

Beyond the aging population, use of zoledronic acid could increase even further if the signs that it prevents breast cancer recurrence continue in larger studies.

Brufsky's study, Z-FAST (Zometa-Femara Adjuvant Synergy Trial), focused on 602 postmenopausal women with stage I to IIIa estrogen or progesterone receptor-positive breast cancer. The researchers randomized patients to immediate zoledronic acid or delayed zoledronic acid. The delayed group received it only if the T-score dropped below two or a clinical fracture occurred.

After five years, patients in the immediate treatment arm had a bone mineral density increase of 6.2% in their lumbar spine area, while those in the delayed arm had a decrease of 2.4%. In the hip area, the increase was 2.6% with immediate treatment compared with a 4.1% decrease with delayed treatment.

Fractures occurred in 10.7% of the patients treated immediately and 12.4% of the patients who received delayed treatment. There were no serious renal events and no osteonecrosis of the jaw, which confirmed that the drug was safe and well tolerated.

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Friday, January 9, 2009

Zoledronic Acid May Have Anti-Tumor Properties

Early evaluations of the bisphosphonate zoledronic acid (Zometa® , Novartis Oncology) suggest a possible direct anti-tumor effect when combined with neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer treatment, according to data presented to scientists and other medical professionals gathered at the Henry B. Gonzales Convention Center in San Antonio to hear and present the latest scientific findings in breast cancer research during the CTRC-AACR San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium (December 10-14, 2008 ).

There is substantial in vitro evidence that zoledronic acid has direct antitumour effects and synergy with chemotherapy agents. Bisphosphonates may therefore be an adjuvant therapeutic strategy of potential importance.

‘Zoledronic acid is primarily targeted to bone and metastasis within the bone marrow microenvironment, but it may also be enhancing the response in the primary breast tumor,’ explained Robert Coleman, M.D., FRCP, professor of medical oncology at the University of Sheffield in the United Kingdom.

Coleman is the lead researcher on the AZURE (Adjuvant Zoledronic Acid to Reduce Recurrence) trial, a prospective, randomised, open label, parallel group trial designed to to evaluate the effect of zoledronic acid on breast cancer. ‘Although the larger AZURE trial is still being evaluated, if the findings in this smaller study are confirmed, the effect could be practice changing,' Coleman said.

The AZURE trial opened to recruitment in September 2003. Patients were recruited from 176 centres worldwide, completing accrual in January 2006, 8 months ahead of schedule, and enrolled 3,360 women with stage II/III breast cancer. The trial was set up to determine whether adjuvant treatment with 4 mg zoledronic acid in addition to adjuvant or neoadjuvant chemotherapy would improve the disease-free and bone metastasis-free survival of women with breast cancer at high risk of relapse.

Analysis of the characteristics of the study population shows that both groups are well
matched across all criteria. 51% of patients have T2 tumour at presentation, with 76.6% being ER positive. 60.6% and 33.2% had 1-3 and ≥4 axillary nodes involved respectively and 6.4% were treated in the neoadjuvant setting. Anthracyclines were administered to 92.6% and 22.7% received taxanes, in large part due to accrual into the TANGO trial concurrent with AZURE. Only 4.6% received endocrine therapy alone. Almost half of the patients (44.6%) were premenopausal at randomisation.

Coleman and colleagues performed a retrospective pathology analysis on 205 patients who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy to determine zoledronic acid’s impact on the primary tumor. Zoledronic acid appeared to reduce tumor size from 30 mm in the chemotherapy alone group to 20.5 mm in the combination group.

After adjusting for variables like estrogen receptor status and treatment duration, the difference remained at 42.4 mm in the chemotherapy group and 28.2 mm in the combination group. The pathological complete response rate was 5.8 percent in the chemotherapy arm and 10.9 percent in the zoledronic acid group.

The number of patients requiring mastectomy was 77.9 percent in the chemotherapy group and 65.3 percent in the combination group. ‘Zoledronic acid is currently approved for the treatment of bone metastasis and osteoporosis. If the AZURE trial remains positive, then we’ll file for an additional indication,’ Coleman said.

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