Up to 75% of patients with advanced solid tumors and nearly all patients with multiple myeloma will develop bone complications, putting their skeletal health in jeopardy.5 Treatment for patients with bone metastases may help reduce the risk of debilitating complications.
Types of treatments for patients with bone metastases9
Chemotherapy
Chemotherapy is a treatment frequently used to treat patients with bone metastases. This type of agent enters the bloodstream and travels to reach cancer cells that have spread throughout the body. Administered either by injection or taken orally, chemotherapy is directed at the cancer itself but may also kill off normal cells in the process of killing cancer cells—a process that may cause side effects.
Hormone therapy
Hormone therapy is also used to treat patients with bone metastases. Like chemotherapy, it is either injected or taken orally, and is designed to stop the production of hormones or block the effects that hormones have on cancer growth.
Radiopharmaceuticals
Radiopharmaceuticals are a group of drugs that deliver radioactive elements to areas of the bone that contain cancer. Radiopharmaceuticals are injected into a vein and are most useful when the metastases are osteoblastic—meaning the cancer has stimulated the formation of new areas of bone. This type of treatment is also useful at delivering radiation to many bones at one time.
Bone Remodeling Agents
Unlike chemotherapy or hormone therapy, these agents do not attack the cancer but are designed to help reduce and delay pathologic fractures. Bone remodeling agents, like ZOMETA, are used along with the chemotherapy or hormone therapy for bone metastasis and have been shown to reduce the risk of broken bones.
Types of treatments for patients with multiple myeloma
Radiation Therapy
Radiation therapy uses high-energy radiation from X-rays, gamma rays, neutrons and other sources to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors. 10
Stem-cell Transplantation
This involves the transplantation of blood-forming stem cells in an effort to help the body make healthy blood cells. A stem-cell transplant allows a patient to be treated with high doses of drugs. New blood cells develop from the transplanted cells and replace the ones that were affected by treatment.10
High-dose Chemotherapy
Often used in conjunction with stem-cell transplantation,7 chemotherapy uses anticancer drugs, which are primarily injected by vein or given by mouth. Chemotherapy kills fast-growing myeloma cells, but can also harm normal cells that divide rapidly.10
Medical Therapy
Medical therapy uses drugs that block the action of an abnormal protein that stimulates the growth of myeloma cells.10
IV (Intravenous) Bisphosphonate Therapy
Bisphosphonates like ZOMETA, help slow the bone destroying activity that occurs with multiple myeloma by inhibiting osteoclast activity.11 IV bisphosphonates can reduce or delay bone lesions from multiple myeloma.12
Highlights from the Important Safety Information for ZOMETA
- ZOMETA is contraindicated in patients with hypersensitivity to zoledronic acid or any components of ZOMETA.
- Hypersensitivity reactions, including rare cases of urticaria and angioedema, and very rare cases of anaphylactic reaction/shock, have been reported.
- Patients being treated with ZOMETA should not be treated with Reclast® (zoledronic acid) as they contain the same active ingredient.
Learn more about ZOMETA therapy