Favorable skeletal benefit/risk of long-term denosumab therapy: A virtual-twin analysis of fractures prevented relative to skeletal safety events observed
- PMID: 32092479
- DOI: 10.1016/j.bone.2020.115287
Favorable skeletal benefit/risk of long-term denosumab therapy: A virtual-twin analysis of fractures prevented relative to skeletal safety events observed
Abstract
Antiresorptive therapies reduce fracture risk; however, long-term bone turnover inhibition may raise concerns about rare, but serious, skeletal adverse events-atypical femoral fracture (AFF) and osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ). Denosumab, a fully human monoclonal antibody against RANKL, has demonstrated sustained low vertebral and nonvertebral fracture rates with low skeletal adverse event rates in the 3-year FREEDOM trial and its 7-year Extension (in which all subjects received open-label denosumab). In this analysis, we aimed to estimate fractures prevented relative to skeletal adverse events observed with 10 years of denosumab therapy. We modeled a hypothetical placebo group using the virtual-twin method, thereby allowing calculation of fractures prevented with denosumab treatment (relative to the virtual-placebo group) in the context of AFF or ONJ events observed in the long-term denosumab group. Estimated virtual-placebo and observed long-term denosumab exposure-adjusted fracture rates per 100,000 subject-years were calculated for fractures classified as clinical (3180 and 1777, respectively), major osteoporotic (2699 and 1525), vertebral (1879 and 901), and nonvertebral (2924 and 1528), and compared with observed AFF and ONJ in the long-term denosumab group (5 and 35 per 100,000 subject-years, respectively). The skeletal benefit/risk ratio (fractures prevented per adverse event observed) for clinical fractures was 281 (AFF) and 40 (ONJ). Based on this model, denosumab treatment for up to 10 years has a favorable skeletal benefit/risk profile when comparing fractures prevented per skeletal adverse event observed. Clinical trial registration: NCT00089791, NCT00523341.
Keywords: Antiresorptives; Fracture prevention; Osteoporosis.
Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Inc.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest S Ferrari has received research grants from Amgen, UCB Pharma, and Agnovos; has received consulting fees from Amgen, UCB Pharma, Eli Lilly, Agnovos, and LAbatec; and has given expert testimony for Novartis. EM Lewiecki has received research grants from Radius, Amgen, Mereo, and Bindex; has received consulting fees and served on the advisory board for Amgen, Radius, Alexion, Sandoz, and Samsung Bioepis; and has served on the speaker's bureau for Radius and Alexion. PW Butler, DB Crittenden, and N Pannacciulli are former employees and stockholders of Amgen Inc. DL Kendler has received research grants from Amgen and AstraZeneca; has received consulting fees from Amgen and Eli Lilly; and has served on the speaker's bureau for Amgen, Eli Lilly, and Pfizer. N Napoli has received consulting fees from Abiogen, Eli Lilly, and UCB Biopharma; and has served on the speaker's bureau for Eli Lilly. S Huang is an employee and stockholder of Amgen Inc. E Siris has received royalties from Up To Date as a peer reviewer for denosumab. N Binkley has received research grants from Radius, RTI Health Solutions, and GE Healthcare; and has received consulting fees/served on an Advisory Board for Amgen and Taurus.
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