Bone drug may help fight breast cancer
London, June 3 (ANI): Zoledronic acid (Zometa), the bone strengthening drug, can help fight metastatic breast cancer when given before surgery, suggests a new research by Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
In the study, when the drug was given along with chemotherapy for three months before breast cancer surgery, it reduced the number of women who had tumour cells in their bone marrow at the time of surgery.
Every day, tumours shed thousands of cells, which spread throughout the body and are referred to as disseminated tumour cells (DTCs). Breast cancer DTCs often lodge in bone marrow where bone growth factors help them survive.
Chemotherapy can increase bone turnover and bone growth factors, potentially exacerbating the problem of DTCs in the bone, which can resurface later to cause metastatic disease in cancer patients.
"Bone marrow seems to be a DTC sanctuary, allowing them to adapt and disseminate to different organs, where they're a leading cause of death. We believe that zoledronic acid inhibits the release of growth factors that help support the growth of DTCs," said study leader Rebecca Aft, associate professor of surgery and a breast cancer specialist at the Alvin J. Siteman Cancer Center at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine.
Zoledronic acid is generally prescribed to reduce and delay bone complications due to multiple myeloma and bone metastases from solid tumors.
Two recent studies showed that zoledronic acid improves disease-free survival when used along with estrogen-lowering therapy before breast cancer surgery. Estrogen-lowering therapy, like chemotherapy, potentially increases bone loss.
In this randomized phase II clinical trial, researchers split 109 women with newly diagnosed stage II or stage III breast cancer into two groups. The control group received chemotherapy alone, while the other received a combination treatment of chemotherapy and zoledronic acid.
After three months of therapy, patients with DTCs in their bone marrow decreased from 43 percent to 30 percent in the combination group, compared with a decrease from 48 percent to 47 percent in the control group. This result approached statistical significance.
The researchers also found that of those patients who had no DTCs in their bone marrow at the start of the study, 87 percent remained negative after three months of combination treatment compared to 60 percent of those who received chemotherapy alone, a result that was statistically significant.
Zoledronic acid treatment with chemotherapy had additional benefits. Women in the combination group experienced significant gains in bone density after 12 months.
This is helpful for breast cancer patients, who often develop osteoporosis as a side effect of chemotherapy and other breast cancer treatments.
The study was published in the May issue of The Lancet Oncology. (ANI)
-
Gold Silver Rate Today, 10 March 2026: City-Wise Prices Edge Lower While MCX Gold And Silver Stay Range-Bound -
Hyderabad To Get Faster Road Link To Indore As New Highway Nears Completion, Opening Likely This Month -
Hyderabad Gold Silver Rate Today, 10 March 2026: Gold, Silver Slip In Local Market; MCX Also Trades Lower -
Oil Slumps 6% As Trump Claims Iran War Will Be Over 'Ahead of Schedule' -
Pune Gold Rate Today For 18K, 22K, 24K For Rates March 2026 -
Bangalore Gold Silver Rate Today, March 10, 2026: Gold and Silver Prices Go Up -
IPL 2026 Schedule Announcement On March 12: BCCI to Release First 20 Days of Indian Premier League Fixtures -
IPL 2026 Playing XI Prediction: CSK, MI, RCB, KKR, PBKS, GT, LSG, DC, RR, SRH Impact Sub & Full Team List -
Chennai Hotels Warn of Shutdown In 2 Days As LPG Supply Crunch Hits TN -
Trisha Shouldn't Have Attended The Event With Vijay: Parthiban -
Pakistan Facing Oil Crisis? PM Orders Shutdown Of Schools And Universities, Introduces 4-Day Workweek -
Flight Ticket Prices To Turn Costly Due To Iran Crisis? SpiceJet Chief Hints At Airfare Hike












Click it and Unblock the Notifications