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Journal of Comparative Effectiveness Research 2013-Jan

Adverse events across generations of bone-modifying agents in patients with solid tumor cancers reported in Phase III randomized trials.

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Michael Poon
Liying Zhang
Florence Mok
Kenneth Li
Urban Emmenegger
Erin Wong
Michelle Zhou
Henry Lam
Nicholas Lao
Edward Chow

Keywords

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

The objective of this study is to compare adverse events experienced among different bone-modifying agents.

METHODS

A literature search was conducted to identify Phase III bisphosphonate and bone-modifying agent trials reporting adverse effects. Thirty-seven adverse events of interest were identified for six different treatment options. Weighted linear regression modeling was performed on the adverse event proportions with treatment groups, normalized through applying natural log transformations.

RESULTS

There were significant differences in adverse events of vomiting (p = 0.045) and osteonecrosis of the jaw (p = 0.017), and combined item events of nausea/vomiting (p = 0.048), hematological and lymphatic system toxicities (p = 0.020), and any respiratory system problem (p = 0.023) between bone-modifying agent and placebo trials. The significant toxicities were observed even after adjusting for the two confounding factors of age and primary cancer site.

CONCLUSIONS

While adverse effects are consistently experienced more frequently in patients receiving bone-modifying agents when compared with placebos, we find that the majority of individual side effects are not significantly more frequent in patients receiving bone-modifying agents compared with placebo.

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