News

Denosumab's Effect Greater on Femoral Neck


 

Expert Analysis from a Meeting on Osteoporosis

Major Finding: Denosumab decreased nonvertebral fractures by 35% in patients with a femoral neck bone mineral density T score of −2.5 or lower and by only 3% in patients with higher femoral neck T scores, compared with patients in those subgroups who received placebo.

Data Source: Subgroup analysis in the original study of 7,808 postmenopausal women aged 60-80 years with osteoporosis who received every 6 months either a subcutaneous injection of denosumab (60 mg) or placebo along with daily calcium and vitamin D supplements.

Disclosures: Dr. Cummings has been a consultant to Amgen Pharmaceuticals, which markets denosumab; to Merck, which markets alendronate; and to Eli Lilly and Company.

SAN FRANCISCO – The pivotal clinical trial of denosumab showed a 20% decrease in nonvertebral fractures compared with placebo treatment, but a new subgroup analysis shows the protective effect is significantly higher in patients with femoral neck osteoporosis.

The preplanned subgroup analysis of data from the FREEDOM trial found that denosumab decreased nonvertebral fractures by 35% in patients with a femoral neck bone mineral density T score of −2.5 or lower and by only 3% in patients with higher femoral neck T scores, compared with patients in those subgroups who received placebo, Dr. Steven R. Cummings said.

The report of a 20% reduction in nonvertebral fractures in the overall trial for denosumab “underestimates its efficacy for those patients that we're most interested in treating with this drug – those with osteoporosis,” he said at the conference, sponsored by the University of California, San Francisco.

The analysis is one of several preplanned subgroup analyses being conducted, though this one is “the most interesting result for clinical care,” said Dr. Cummings, emeritus professor of medicine and epidemiology and biostatistics at the university.

The original FREEDOM study (Fracture Reduction Evaluation of Denosumab in Osteoporosis Every 6 Months) enrolled 7,808 postmenopausal women aged 60-80 years with osteoporosis to receive every 6 months either a subcutaneous injection of denosumab (60 mg) or placebo along with daily calcium and vitamin D supplements. All subjects had bone mineral density T scores less than −2.5 but not less than −4.0 at the lumbar spine or total hip. At 36 months, denosumab was associated with reductions of 68% in vertebral fracture and 40% in hip fracture (N. Engl. J. Med. 2009;361:756-65).

The FREEDOM results were the basis of the Food and Drug Administration's approval of denosumab in June 2010.

Data for 2,343 patients who continued denosumab for another 2 years and 2,207 patients who switched from placebo to denosumab in an ongoing extension of the trial suggest that the incidence of nonvertebral fractures continues to decline in the first 5 years of denosumab use. The 5-year results have been submitted for publication, he said (“Denosumab's Bone Benefits Persist at 5 Years of Therapy,”

For nonvertebral fractures, the incidence decreased from 2.6% in the denosumab group in the first year of the FREEDOM trial to 2.1% in year 2 and 2.2% in year 3. Nonvertebral fractures were seen in 1.4% of patients in year 4 and 1.1% of patients in year 5, extension study data show. Similar rates were seen for vertebral fractures.

The extension study did not include a placebo comparison, so “we did a pretty rigorous estimate of what the rates would be if the placebo group had continued out to 5 years,” Dr. Cummings said. They estimated that nonvertebral or vertebral fracture rates would be 2.6% in the placebo group in years 4 and 5.

Recommended Reading

Vitamin D Prevents Bone Loss Due to Breast Cancer Therapy
MDedge Endocrinology
Oral Vitamin D May Avert Lupus Inflammation : Vitamin D supplements lower levels of inflammatory and hemostatic biomarkers.
MDedge Endocrinology
MD Encouragement Improves Antiresorptive Tx Adherence
MDedge Endocrinology
Use Guidelines on Calcium, Vitamin D Loosely
MDedge Endocrinology
Obese Older Women Risk Ankle, Tibia Fractures
MDedge Endocrinology
Reclast Cut Fractures by Two-Thirds in Osteoporotic Men
MDedge Endocrinology
Vertebroplasty 'Benefits' May Be Placebo Effect
MDedge Endocrinology
Mortality Risk Doubles During Year After Hip Fracture
MDedge Endocrinology
Hip Fracture Risk Rose at Start of Loop Diuretic
MDedge Endocrinology
Oral Calcitonin Scores in Osteoporosis Trial
MDedge Endocrinology