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Query: UMLS:C0376358 (
prostate cancer
)
59,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bone metastases are a major problem in the clinical management of patients with breast or
prostate cancer
. Severe bone pain can be a particularly debilitating effect of metastatic disease, resulting in a growing dependency on opioid analgesics and a reduced quality of life in patients who have a short time to survive. The radiopharmaceutical strontium-89 has been demonstrated to be generally well tolerated as well as effective in reducing metastatic bone pain in breast or
prostate cancer
patients. Unlike other radioisotopes or external radiation treatments, it represents systemic, targeted therapy that is simple and fast to administer in an outpatient setting. Data accumulated over the last 15 years demonstrates that 89Sr provides pain relief in up to 80% of patients with bony metastases arising from breast or prostatic malignancies. Pain palliation is maintained for several months, along with improvements in functional status and quality of life. As many as one fifth of 89Sr-treated patients become pain free and require no further pain medication. The adverse effects of intravenous 89Sr are minimal.
Bone marrow toxicity
is observed in many patients, resulting in some reduction of platelet and white blood cell counts. Despite reductions of 20% to 30%, these hematologic effects are generally reversible and the majority of patients maintain platelet counts that are within normal limits. Strontium-89 is effective systemic radioisotopic therapy for the palliation of painful bony metastases from breast and prostate carcinoma.
...
PMID:Clinical experience with strontium-89 in prostatic and breast cancer patients. 850 27
Two-thirds of patients with metastatic cancer suffer from pain. Pain originating from skeletal metastases is the most common form of cancer-related pain. Bone pain, often exacerbated by pressure or movement, limits the patient's autonomy and social life. Pain palliation with bone-seeking radiopharmaceuticals has proven to be an effective treatment modality in patients with metastatic bone pain. These bone-seeking radiopharmaceuticals are extremely powerful in treating scattered painful bone metastases, for which external beam radiotherapy is impossible because of the large field of irradiation. (186)Re-hydroxyethylidene diphosphonate (HEDP) is a potentially useful radiopharmaceutical for this purpose, having numerous advantageous characteristics.
Bone marrow toxicity
is limited and reversible, which makes repetitive treatment safe. Studies have shown encouraging clinical results of palliative therapy using (186)Re-HEDP, with an overall response rate of ca. 70% in painful bone metastases. It is effective for fast palliation of painful bone metastases from various tumours and the effect tends to last longer if patients are treated early in the course of their disease. (186)Re-HEDP is at least as effective in breast cancer patients with painful bone metastases as in patients with metastatic
prostate cancer
. It is to be preferred to radiopharmaceuticals with a long physical half-life in this group of patients, who tend to have more extensive haematological toxicity since they have frequently been pretreated with bone marrow suppressive chemotherapy. This systemic form of radionuclide therapy is simple to administer and complements other treatment options. It has been associated with marked pain reduction, improved mobility in many patients, reduced dependence on analgesics, and improved performance status and quality of life.
...
PMID:186Re-HEDP for metastatic bone pain in breast cancer patients. 1511 46