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Assessment and management of bone health in women with oestrogen receptor-positive breast cancer receiving endocrine therapy: position statement summary
Version 2 2024-06-04, 11:11Version 2 2024-06-04, 11:11
Version 1 2019-07-24, 10:52Version 1 2019-07-24, 10:52
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 11:11 authored by M Grossmann, SK Ramchand, F Milat, A Vincent, E Lim, MA Kotowicz, J Hicks, HJ Teede© 2019 AMPCo Pty Ltd Introduction: Representatives appointed by relevant Australian medical societies used a systematic approach for adaptation of guidelines (ADAPTE) to formulate clinical consensus recommendations on assessment and management of bone health in women with oestrogen receptor-positive early breast cancer receiving endocrine therapy. The current evidence suggests that women receiving adjuvant aromatase inhibitors and pre-menopausal woman treated with tamoxifen have accelerated bone loss and that women receiving adjuvant aromatase inhibitors have increased fracture risk. Both bisphosphonates and denosumab prevent bone loss; additionally, denosumab has proven anti-fracture benefit in post-menopausal women receiving aromatase inhibitors for hormone receptor-positive breast cancer. Main recommendations: Women considering endocrine therapy need fracture risk assessment, including clinical risk factors, biochemistry and bone mineral density measurement, with monitoring based on risk factors. Weight-bearing exercise and vitamin D and calcium sufficiency are recommended routinely. Anti-resorptive treatment is indicated in women with prevalent or incident clinical or morphometric fragility fractures, and should be considered in women with a T score (or Z score in women aged < 50 years) of < − 2.0 at any site, or if annual bone loss is ≥ 5%, considering baseline bone mineral density and other fracture risk factors. Duration of anti-resorptive treatment can be individualised based on absolute fracture risk. Relative to their skeletal benefits, risks of adverse events with anti-resorptive treatments are low. Changes in management as result of the position statement: Skeletal health should be considered in the decision-making process regarding choice and duration of endocrine therapy. Before and during endocrine therapy, skeletal health should be assessed regularly, optimised by non-pharmacological intervention and, where indicated, anti-resorptive treatment, in an individualised, multidisciplinary approach.
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Journal
Medical journal of AustraliaVolume
211Pagination
224-229Location
Chichester, Eng.Publisher DOI
ISSN
0025-729XeISSN
1326-5377Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2019, AMPCo Pty LtdIssue
5Publisher
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