Radiopharmaceuticals for Painful Bone Metastases: Perspective from Radiation Oncology
Available online 3 November 2011.
Cancer-related bone pain is a significant cause of morbidity and reduces quality of life for patients with bone metastases. Management should be conducted in a multidisciplinary setting with a multimodality approach. Radionuclides are an effective treatment option for patients with multifocal osteoblastic metastases, which are typically seen in patients with prostate cancer. Radionuclides can be given on an outpatient basis with simple radioactive precautions and do not require a visit to a radiotherapy center. However, the use of radiopharmaceuticals has been consistently reported as underutilized in the literature. Reasons for underutilization include lack of knowledge and awareness by community practitioners, misconceptions on the toxicity of treatment, and lack of health policy support.1 There is worry about delayed myelosuppression preventing administration of chemotherapy. In addition, radionuclides are usually administered by nuclear medicine physicians, who are not involved in the direct clinical care of cancer patients.
Paes and colleagues provide a useful and informative review on the indications, selection criteria, efficacy, and toxicity of radionuclides, with details on strontium and samarium, the two most common radionuclides in clinical use in the United States. Radionuclides are often used as an alternative to external beam radiotherapy (EBRT), when several sites of painful osteoblastic metastases are present in a distribution greater than that which can be conveniently or safely treated with localized EBRT. The use of hemibody radiotherapy, which can also target widespread bone disease, has largely fallen out of favor in the developed world due to worries about acute and late toxicity. The ASTRO evidence-based guidelines on palliative radiotherapy for bone metastases have recently been published.2 They recognize that radionuclides are an important and often underused treatment option, as well as mention that their use does not obviate the need for EBRT. The guidelines state that additional prospective studies should address the prophylactic use of systemic radionuclides in patients with limited bone metastases as well as the possible combination of radionuclides with other systemic agents such as bisphosphonates or chemotherapy.
Paes and colleagues explore the possible role of chemotherapy as a radiosensitizer and present evidence that there is no biological competition between bisphosphonates and radionuclides so that both can be used in clinical practice. Moving beyond pain palliation, the authors advocate for the use of radionuclides early in the disease while marrow reserves are still high and where there may be a theoretical benefit of targeting subclinical disease and improving patient outcomes. A phase II trial suggested that in patients with advanced prostate cancer, the addition of radionuclides to systemic chemotherapy would improve survival.3