Disease Progression Modeling Analysis of the Change of Bone Mineral Density by Postoperative Hormone Therapies in Postmenopausal Patients With Early Breast Cancer.

In this study we performed disease-progression modeling in postmenopausal patients with early breast cancer who had received 5 years of postoperative hormone therapy. Clinical data from postmenopausal patients who had received postoperative hormonal therapy and met the predefined selection criteria were retrospectively collected in an anonymized way. Disease-progression modeling and simulations were performed using NONMEM version 7.42. A first-order deterioration model with a combination of a symptomatic model (when a drug effect provides a transient bad effect by offsetting the severity of the disease) and a disease-modifying model (when a drug affects the disease progression rate) was used. Vitamin D supplementation was found to have a disease-modifying effect in osteoporosis, whereas AI decreased the bone mineral density by a t score of -0.21. However, after stopping the AI, the estrogen level reverted to normal, thereby reexercising protective effects against bone loss. In the simulation the probability of osteoporosis increased by 10% in the AI group compared with the other groups (tamoxifen, no-treatment group) during the medication period. Tamoxifen showed no significant effects in the final model. PMID: 31172521 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Clinical Genitourinary Cancer - Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Tags: J Clin Pharmacol Source Type: research