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Clinical Trial
. 1987 Oct 31;2(8566):983-5.
doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(87)92555-4.

Reduced morbidity from skeletal metastases in breast cancer patients during long-term bisphosphonate (APD) treatment

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Reduced morbidity from skeletal metastases in breast cancer patients during long-term bisphosphonate (APD) treatment

A T van Holten-Verzantvoort et al. Lancet. .

Abstract

131 patients with osteolytic metastases from breast cancer were randomised to receive long-term oral treatment with aminohydroxy-propylidene-bisphosphonate (APD), 300 mg daily (n = 70), or to act as controls (n = 61) in a multicentre trial. Specific antitumour therapy was at the discretion of the clinician and variable. An interim analysis was made after a median follow-up of 13 months in the APD group and 14 months in the controls. There was a significant reduction in pathological fractures and severe bone pain in the APD group, and hypercalcaemia was prevented. Consequently the necessity for radiotherapy for skeletal complications was more than halved; the number of systemic therapy changes was also reduced. Gastrointestinal side-effects of APD led to a drop-out of 8% of patients. Oral supportive APD therapy is simple and convenient, and significantly reduced skeletal morbidity in advanced breast cancer.

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