TY - JOUR
T1 - Safety of long-term denosumab therapy
T2 - results from the open label extension phase of two phase 3 studies in patients with metastatic breast and prostate cancer
AU - Stopeck, Alison T.
AU - Fizazi, Karim
AU - Body, Jean Jacques
AU - Brown, Janet E.
AU - Carducci, Michael
AU - Diel, Ingo
AU - Fujiwara, Yasuhiro
AU - Martín, Miguel
AU - Paterson, Alexander
AU - Tonkin, Katia
AU - Shore, Neal
AU - Sieber, Paul
AU - Kueppers, Frank
AU - Karsh, Lawrence
AU - Yardley, Denise
AU - Wang, Huei
AU - Maniar, Tapan
AU - Arellano, Jorge
AU - Braun, Ada
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by Amgen Inc. Geoff Smith, PhD, provided medical writing support on behalf of Amgen Inc. Alison T. Stopeck served as a consultant for Amgen Inc., Pfizer, Bayer, Genentech, and Clovis Pharmaceuticals. She received research funding from Amgen Inc., Novartis, Peregrine, Puma, and Bayer. Karim Fizazi received remuneration and served as a consultant for Amgen Inc. Jean-Jacques Body worked as a consultant for Amgen Inc. and Bayer. Janet E. Brown worked as a consultant for Amgen Inc., Novartis, and Bristol Myers Squibb and received remuneration from these companies. Michael Carducci served as a consultant for Amgen Inc. Ingo Diel received remuneration from Amgen Inc., Medtronic, TEVA, and GSK, and served as a consultant for Amgen Inc., Medtronic, and TEVA. Yasuhiro Fujiwara received research funding from Kyowa Hakko Kirin Co Ltd., GlaxoSmithKline KK, Sanofi Aventis KK, Daiichi Sankyo Co Ltd., Taiho Pharmaceutical Co Ltd., Takeda Pharmaceutical Co Ltd., Takeda Bio Development Center Ltd., Chugai Pharmaceutical Co Ltd., Nihon Kayaku Co Ltd., Nippon Boehringer Ingelheim Co Ltd., Novartis Pharma KK, Pfizer Japan, Bristol Myers KK, Janssen Pharmaceutical KK, and Kissei Pharmaceutical Co Ltd. He received lecture fees from AstraZeneca KK, Bristol Myers KK, Chugai Pharmaceutical Co Ltd., Daiichi Sankyo Co Ltd., NEC Corporation, Novartis Pharma KK, Sanofi Aventis KK, and Taiho Pharmaceutical Co Ltd. He served on scientific advisory boards at Chugai Pharmaceutical Co Ltd., MedImmune, and Eli Lilly Japan. Miguel MartÃn served as a consultant for Amgen Inc., Novartis, and Roche Diagnostics. His received research funding from Amgen Inc. Alexander Paterson served as a consultant and received honoraria from Amgen Inc. and Novartis. Neal Shore served as a consultant for Astellas, Bayer, Dendreon, Ferring, Janssen, Medivation, Millennium, and Sanofi. Paul Sieber received remuneration (for Speaker's bureau) from Amgen Inc. Lawrence Karsh served as a consultant for Amgen Inc., Astellas, Medivation, BNiT, Myriad, Bayer, Tolmar, Genomic Health, Dendreon, and Janssen, and hold stock in Swan Valley Medical. His received research funding from Amgen, Astellas, Medivation, BNiT, Jannsen, Dendreon, Pfizer, Takeda, Orion, Auxillium, Argos, MDX Health, and Genomic Health. Denise Yardley, Frank Kueppers, and Katia Tonkin have no stated conflicts. Huei Wang, Tapan Maniar, and Jorge Arellano are employees and stockholders of Amgen Inc. Ada Braun is a former employee and stockholder Amgen Inc. The authors state that they have full control of all primary data, and they agree to allow the journal to review their data if requested.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015, The Author(s).
PY - 2016/1/1
Y1 - 2016/1/1
N2 - Purpose: Zoledronic acid (ZA) or denosumab treatment reduces skeletal-related events; however, the safety of prolonged therapy has not been adequately studied. Here, we describe safety results of extended denosumab therapy in patients with bone metastases from the open-label extension phase of two phase 3 trials. Methods: Patients with metastatic breast or prostate cancer received subcutaneous denosumab 120 mg Q4W or intravenous ZA 4 mg Q4W in a double-blinded fashion. Denosumab demonstrated superior efficacy in the blinded treatment phase; thus, patients were offered open-label denosumab for up to an additional 2 years. Results: Cumulative median (Q1, Q3) denosumab exposure was 19.1 (9.2, 32.2) months in the breast cancer trial (n = 1019) and 12.0 (5.6, 21.3) months in the prostate cancer trial (n = 942); 295 patients received denosumab for >3 years. No new safety signals were identified during the open-label phase, or among patients who switched from ZA to denosumab. During the blinded treatment phase, exposure-adjusted subject incidences of osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ) were 49 (1.9 %) and 31 (1.2 %) in the denosumab and ZA groups, respectively. In total, 32 (6.9 %) and 25 (5.5 %) new cases of ONJ (not adjusted for exposure) were reported for patients continuing and switching to denosumab, respectively. The incidences of hypocalcemia were 4.3 and 3.1 %, in patients continuing and switching to denosumab, respectively. Conclusion: These results describe the safety profile of denosumab after long-term exposure, or after switching to denosumab from ZA. No new safety signals were identified. Hypocalcemia rates were similar in the blinded treatment and open-label phases. ONJ rates increased with increasing exposure to antiresorptives, consistent with previous reports.
AB - Purpose: Zoledronic acid (ZA) or denosumab treatment reduces skeletal-related events; however, the safety of prolonged therapy has not been adequately studied. Here, we describe safety results of extended denosumab therapy in patients with bone metastases from the open-label extension phase of two phase 3 trials. Methods: Patients with metastatic breast or prostate cancer received subcutaneous denosumab 120 mg Q4W or intravenous ZA 4 mg Q4W in a double-blinded fashion. Denosumab demonstrated superior efficacy in the blinded treatment phase; thus, patients were offered open-label denosumab for up to an additional 2 years. Results: Cumulative median (Q1, Q3) denosumab exposure was 19.1 (9.2, 32.2) months in the breast cancer trial (n = 1019) and 12.0 (5.6, 21.3) months in the prostate cancer trial (n = 942); 295 patients received denosumab for >3 years. No new safety signals were identified during the open-label phase, or among patients who switched from ZA to denosumab. During the blinded treatment phase, exposure-adjusted subject incidences of osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ) were 49 (1.9 %) and 31 (1.2 %) in the denosumab and ZA groups, respectively. In total, 32 (6.9 %) and 25 (5.5 %) new cases of ONJ (not adjusted for exposure) were reported for patients continuing and switching to denosumab, respectively. The incidences of hypocalcemia were 4.3 and 3.1 %, in patients continuing and switching to denosumab, respectively. Conclusion: These results describe the safety profile of denosumab after long-term exposure, or after switching to denosumab from ZA. No new safety signals were identified. Hypocalcemia rates were similar in the blinded treatment and open-label phases. ONJ rates increased with increasing exposure to antiresorptives, consistent with previous reports.
KW - Bone metastases
KW - Breast cancer
KW - Denosumab
KW - Osteonecrosis of the jaw
KW - Prostate cancer
KW - Zoledronic acid
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84949085967&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=84949085967&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00520-015-2904-5
DO - 10.1007/s00520-015-2904-5
M3 - Article
C2 - 26335402
AN - SCOPUS:84949085967
SN - 0941-4355
VL - 24
SP - 447
EP - 455
JO - Supportive Care in Cancer
JF - Supportive Care in Cancer
IS - 1
ER -