Adjuvant bisphosphonate treatment in early breast cancer: meta-analyses of individual patient data from randomised trials
- PMID: 26211824
- DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60908-4
Adjuvant bisphosphonate treatment in early breast cancer: meta-analyses of individual patient data from randomised trials
Erratum in
- Lancet. 2016 Jan 2;387(10013):30
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Department of Error.Lancet. 2017 Jun 24;389(10088):2472. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)31454-X. Lancet. 2017. PMID: 28656899 No abstract available.
Abstract
Background: Bisphosphonates have profound effects on bone physiology, and could modify the process of metastasis. We undertook collaborative meta-analyses to clarify the risks and benefits of adjuvant bisphosphonate treatment in breast cancer.
Methods: We sought individual patient data from all unconfounded trials in early breast cancer that randomised between bisphosphonate and control. Primary outcomes were recurrence, distant recurrence, and breast cancer mortality. Primary subgroup investigations were site of first distant recurrence (bone or other), menopausal status (postmenopausal [combining natural and artificial] or not), and bisphosphonate class (aminobisphosphonate [eg, zoledronic acid, ibandronate, pamidronate] or other [ie, clodronate]). Intention-to-treat log-rank methods yielded bisphosphonate versus control first-event rate ratios (RRs).
Findings: We received data on 18,766 women (18,206 [97%] in trials of 2-5 years of bisphosphonate) with median follow-up 5·6 woman-years, 3453 first recurrences, and 2106 subsequent deaths. Overall, the reductions in recurrence (RR 0·94, 95% CI 0·87-1·01; 2p=0·08), distant recurrence (0·92, 0·85-0·99; 2p=0·03), and breast cancer mortality (0·91, 0·83-0·99; 2p=0·04) were of only borderline significance, but the reduction in bone recurrence was more definite (0·83, 0·73-0·94; 2p=0·004). Among premenopausal women, treatment had no apparent effect on any outcome, but among 11 767 postmenopausal women it produced highly significant reductions in recurrence (RR 0·86, 95% CI 0·78-0·94; 2p=0·002), distant recurrence (0·82, 0·74-0·92; 2p=0·0003), bone recurrence (0·72, 0·60-0·86; 2p=0·0002), and breast cancer mortality (0·82, 0·73-0·93; 2p=0·002). Even for bone recurrence, however, the heterogeneity of benefit was barely significant by menopausal status (2p=0·06 for trend with menopausal status) or age (2p=0·03), and it was non-significant by bisphosphonate class, treatment schedule, oestrogen receptor status, nodes, tumour grade, or concomitant chemotherapy. No differences were seen in non-breast cancer mortality. Bone fractures were reduced (RR 0·85, 95% CI 0·75-0·97; 2p=0·02).
Interpretation: Adjuvant bisphosphonates reduce the rate of breast cancer recurrence in the bone and improve breast cancer survival, but there is definite benefit only in women who were postmenopausal when treatment began.
Funding: Cancer Research UK, Medical Research Council.
Copyright © 2015 Early Breast Cancer Trialists' Collaborative Group (EBCTCG). Open Access article distributed under the terms of CC BY. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Comment in
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Bisphosphonates, bone, and breast cancer recurrence.Lancet. 2015 Oct 3;386(10001):1319-1320. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)61163-1. Epub 2015 Jul 23. Lancet. 2015. PMID: 26211825 No abstract available.
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[Bisphosphonates].Perspect Infirm. 2016 Jan-Feb;13(1):71. Perspect Infirm. 2016. PMID: 26998546 French. No abstract available.
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