Osteoporosis and breast cancer.

Joint Bone Spine

Rheumatology and Bone Diseases Unit, Edouard Herriot Teaching Hospital, Inserm 403, Place d'Arsonval, 69437, Lyon cedex 3, France.

Published: March 2004

Osteoporosis affects one in three women after the menopause and the incidence of osteoporotic fractures increases steadily throughout life. Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women, both before and after the menopause. In younger women, recovery from breast cancer has been achieved using aggressive chemotherapy and radiotherapy that can adversely affect bone tissue or induce premature menopause. In postmenopausal women, breast cancer and osteoporosis are common, and although both are dependent on estrogens this leads to conflicting implications for the diagnosis and treatment: estrogens reduce the risk of fractures but increase the risk of breast cancer. Estrogen supplementation is, therefore, contraindicated in patients with a history of breast cancer. Selective estrogen response modifiers (SERMs) hold great promise, as they decrease both the fracture risk via an estrogen-agonist effect on bone and the breast cancer risk via an estrogen-antagonist effect on the breast tissue. SERMs can be used after successful treatment for breast cancer. Bisphosphonates, which are potent bone resorption inhibitors, are widely used both in cancer patients and in the prevention and treatment of spinal and peripheral osteoporotic fractures. Contraindications are exceedingly rare, and the satisfactory safety profile of these agents can be expected to improve further with newly developed modes of administration. Whether the bisphosphonates currently used to treat osteoporosis (alendronate and risendronate) have beneficial effects on skeletal events related to cancer progression remains to be determined, however. In sum, selection of the optimal treatment for osteoporosis in a patient with breast cancer involves assessment of the risk/benefit ratio of each treatment option, based on patient age, other risk factors for osteoporosis, and the stage of breast cancer progression.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbspin.2003.02.001DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

breast cancer
40
cancer
13
breast
10
cancer osteoporosis
8
women menopause
8
osteoporotic fractures
8
cancer progression
8
osteoporosis
6
treatment
5
risk
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!