Abstract
Background: Phase III study comparing the effect of oral ibandronate and intravenous zoledronic acid on bone markers. Patients and methods: Breast cancer patients with bone metastases received ibandronate 50 mg/day (n = 137) or zoledronic acid 4 mg every 4 weeks (n = 138) for 12 weeks. The primary end point was mean percentage change in serum levels of cross-linked C-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen (S-CTX) at week 12. Urinary CTX (U-CTX), bone alkaline phosphatase (ALP), amino-terminal procollagen propeptide of type I collagen (PINP) and osteocalcin (OC) were also measured and bone pain and safety assessed. Results: Both bisphosphonates significantly reduced S-CTX (mean ibandronate 76% ± 29 (SD) versus mean zoledronic acid 73% ± 47; P < 0.001 for both versus baseline) and U-CTX (ibandronate 78% ± 50 versus zoledronic acid 86% ± 17; P < 0.001). The difference in S-CTX between treatments was 0.6% (confidence interval 21.7% to 3.0%), which was within the prespecified noninferiority margin. Bone ALP, PINP and OC decreased by 26%-47% compared with baseline with both bisphosphonates. Compared with zoledronic acid, ibandronate patients reported fewer adverse events overall (65.0% versus 75.9%), and on days 1-3 (8.0% versus 47.5%), including less pyrexia (overall incidence 0% versus 16.8%) and bone pain (5.8% versus 12.4%). Conclusions: Oral ibandronate was well tolerated and statistically noninferior to zoledronic acid for percentage change in the bone resorption marker, S-CTX. © 2007 European Society for Medical Oncology.
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Body, J. J., Lichinitser, M., Tjulandin, S., Garnero, P., & Bergström, B. (2007). Oral ibandronate is as active as intravenous zoledronic acid for reducing bone turnover markers in women with breast cancer and bone metastases. Annals of Oncology, 18(7), 1165–1171. https://doi.org/10.1093/annonc/mdm119
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