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Clinical Trial
. 2003;26(9):661-71.
doi: 10.2165/00002018-200326090-00005.

Extended safety profile of oral clodronate after long-term use in primary breast cancer patients

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Extended safety profile of oral clodronate after long-term use in primary breast cancer patients

Sari Atula et al. Drug Saf. 2003.

Abstract

Introduction: Long-term safety and tolerance is paramount when treating women who are otherwise healthy after the primary adjuvant therapy of breast cancer. Efficacy and limited safety results of a large-scale clinical trial, using adjuvant oral clodronate to prevent bone metastases in primary breast cancer patients, have been reported previously, demonstrating a reduction in the rate of bone metastases during treatment. Here we present expanded safety and tolerability results for clodronate treatment from this trial (cut-off date extended from June 1997 to June 2000).

Study design and methods: For this randomised, double-blind, placebocontrolled, multicentre study, patients were enrolled and randomised to receive oral clodronate (Bonefos) 1600 mg/day or placebo for 2 years. The total median treatment period plus follow-up was 5.5 years. Adverse events (AEs) and laboratory parameters were followed up regularly for the total study period. The 95% CIs were estimated for the difference in the rate of AEs between the treatment groups.

Patients: A total of 1079 women with primary operable breast cancer were enrolled to the study; 538 received clodronate and 541 received placebo.

Results: Overall incidence of AEs (96.5% of the patients) was the same in both treatment groups, although gastrointestinal disorders were significantly more frequent in the clodronate group during the total study period (66% vs 56.2%; 95% CI 4.0-15.6; p < 0.05). This was mainly due to an increase in non-severe diarrhoea beginning 3-4 months after treatment start. Serious AEs (SAEs) were reported for 39.4% of the patients receiving clodronate and 44.5% of those receiving placebo; no drug-related (clodronate or placebo) SAEs were identified. Clodronate significantly lowered mortality (98 deaths vs 129 deaths; hazard ratio 0.77; 95% CI 0.59-1.00; p = 0.047) reducing the risk of death over the total study period by 23%. AEs caused 58 early discontinuations (five drug-related events) in the clodronate group and 43 discontinuations (three drug-related events) in the placebo group.

Conclusion: These results indicate that in women with early breast cancer receiving adjuvant systemic therapy, oral clodronate for 2 years is generally well tolerated with no serious long-term sequelae, providing a safe, long-term therapy in the adjuvant setting.

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