1997
DOI: 10.1007/s002590050143
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Strontium-89 for palliation of pain from bone metastases in patients with prostate and breast cancer

Abstract: We have used strontium-89 chloride (89Sr) for the palliative treatment of metastatic bone pain. Seventy-six patients (50 males with prostate carcinoma and 26 females with breast cancer) were treated with 148 MBq of 89Sr. Sixteen patients were retreated, receiving two or three doses; the total number of injected doses was consequently 95. The Karnofsky performance status was assessed and pain and analgesia were scored on scales of 9 and 5 points, respectively. The efficacy of 89Sr was evaluated at 3 months of t… Show more

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Cited by 89 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…The proportion of patients obtaining a 50% reduction or more of baseline pain defined as partial response after therapy was 70% in 77 -84 days. The overall results from our study are analogous to data presented in other randomized controlled trials and in large observational studies [8,9,11,12]. There were not clear differences in clinical efficacy among available radionuclides, which induce clinical relevant pain relief and complete pain relief in range from 50% to 95% and from 20% to 30% of patients, respectively.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 73%
“…The proportion of patients obtaining a 50% reduction or more of baseline pain defined as partial response after therapy was 70% in 77 -84 days. The overall results from our study are analogous to data presented in other randomized controlled trials and in large observational studies [8,9,11,12]. There were not clear differences in clinical efficacy among available radionuclides, which induce clinical relevant pain relief and complete pain relief in range from 50% to 95% and from 20% to 30% of patients, respectively.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 73%
“…Pain relief typically occurs within 1 week of intravenous 153 Sm-EDTMP administration and usually lasts for about 8-12 weeks, although prolonged responses of up to 12 months have been reported [23]. The advantage of 89 Sr is a longer mean response duration of approximately 4 to 6 months, but this benefit must be weighed against the delayed onset of symptom palliation of 14-28 days after radiopharmaceutical administration [30] and the increased risk of myelosuppression. …”
Section: Clinical Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The physical half life of 46.3 h is shorter than Sr 89, resulting in a faster delivery and response [Resche et al 1997]. After a single injection, overall response rates for pain are Other common toxicity Nausea and vomiting Pain flare 13% (⩾grade 3 = 4%) 10% [Pons et al 1997;KraeberBodere et al 2000;Turner et al 2001;Sciuto et al 2002;Oosterhof et al 2003] 65-74% with onset at 1 week, and duration 2-3 months Resche et al 1997;Serafini et al 1998;Tian et al 1999;Sartor et al 2004]. Grade 3 myelosuppression is significant, occurring in 3-12%, with blood counts reaching nadir by week 3-5 [Resche et al 1997;Serafini et al 1998;Tian et al 1999;Sartor et al 2004 [Maxon et al 1990;Palmedo et al 2003;Liepe et al 2003].…”
Section: Samarium 153mentioning
confidence: 99%