N-Telopeptide of Type I Collagen Long-Term Dynamics in Breast Cancer Patients With Bone Metastases: Clinical Outcomes and Influence of Extraskeletal Metastases.

CONCLUSION: In the present contemporaneous cohort of BC patients with BMs, the NTX response at 3 months was strongly associated with survival. Furthermore, an early response to ZA was strongly associated with long-term NTX control. Finally, patients with BMs plus extraskeletal metastases had an erratic NTX variation. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: The present study showed that when accommodating recent therapy innovations and longer patient survival, the N-telopeptide (NTX) variation at 3 months is strongly associated with survival. In this setting, in addition to a few other clinicopathological features, NTX is a powerful prognostic marker. Moreover, early NTX correction associates with persistently normal NTX. This might identify a subgroup of patients with a good prognosis who are eligible for premature zoledronic acid (ZA) de-escalation. Finally, patients with bone plus extraskeletal metastases showed an erratic variation of NTX, raising concerns that a single ZA regimen might not fit all patients. Future trials should test its effect according to the presence of extraskeletal involvement. PMID: 27534575 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: The Oncologist - Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Tags: Oncologist Source Type: research