Title: Nik Desai, DMD, MD
1Bisphosphonate Related Osteonecrosis of the Jaws
- Nik Desai, DMD, MD
- Division of Oral Maxillofacial Surgery
- Department of Plastic Surgery
- Kaiser Permanente Medical Group
- Santa Clara, CA
- 04/28/2010
2Objectives
- Bisphosphonates
- Clinical applications
- Drug chemistry
- Biologic action
- BRONJ
- Pathogenesis
- Treatment of BRONJ
- Latest management recommendations
- Updates in the literature
- Case Presentations
3Bisphosphonates what are they?
- Class of drugs
- High affinity for calcium
- Binds to bone surfaces
- Nitrogen increased affinity, potency
- Prevent bone resorption and remodeling
- IV and oral formulations
- IV tx for bone resorption 2 metastatic
tumors, osteolytic lesions - Oral tx for osteoporosis, osteopenia
4Bisphosphonates Common uses
- Prevention and treatment of osteoporosis in
- postmenopausal women
- Increase bone mass in men with osteoporosis
- Tx of glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis
- Tx of Pagets disease of bone
- Hypercalcemia of malignancy
- Bone metastases of solid tumors
- breast and prostate carcinoma other solid tumors
- Osteolytic lesions of multiple myeloma
5History of Bisphosphonate Development
- Mid-19th Century German chemists
- Anti-corrosive in pipelines
- 20th Century - Clinical applications
- Tc99 Bone scans
- Toothpaste
- Anti-tartar, anti-plaque effects
- Osteopathies
- Anti-resorptive effect
6Basic Chemical Composition
- Pyrophosphate compound
- Substitution of Carbon for Oxygen
- Resistance to hydrolysis
- Bone matrix accumulation
- Extremely long half-life
- Nitrogen-containing side chain
- Increases potency, toxicity
- Direct link to BRONJ cases
7Antiresorptive Potency of BPs in Observed Human
Clinical Trials
8Biologic Action of Bisphosphonates
- Osteoclastic toxicity
- Apoptosis
- Inhibited release of bone induction proteins
- BMP, ILG1, ILG2
- Reduced bone turnover, resorption
- Reduced serum calcium
- Hypermineralization
- sclerotic changes in lamina dura of alveolar
bone - goal of medicinal use
9Normal Osteoclastic Function
10Medical Indications for IV BPs
- Bone metastasis, hypercalcemia
- RANKL-mediated osteoclastic resorption
- Multiple myeloma, breast CA, prostate CA
- Paracrine-like effect
- PTH-like peptide osteoclastic resorption
- Small cell carcinoma, oropharyngeal cancers
- Endocrine-like effect
11Medical Indications for Oral BPs
- Pagets Disease of bone
- Accelerated bone turnover
- Reduced compressive strength, increased
vascularity - Bone pain
- Elevated AP levels
- Osteoporosis
- Effects of estrogen loss
- Decreased bone turnover/renewal
- Adipocyte differentiation gt osteoblastic
differentiation - increased fibrofatty marrow
- Progressively porotic bone
- DEXA scan for BMD values
12Drug Administration and Dosage
13Pharmacokinetics
- Oral BPs
- Absorbed in small intestine
- Less if taken with meal
- 1-10 available to bone
- Circulating half-life 0.5-2 hrs
- Rapid uptake into bone matrix
- 30-70 of IV/oral dose accumulates in bone
- Remainder excreted in urine
- Repeated doses accumulate in bone
- Removed only by osteoclast-mediated resorption
- Biologic Catch 22
14Etidronate (Didronel)
- Available in both oral and IV preparations
- Oral FDA approved for Pagets disease
- Dose 5 mg/kg per day
- IV approved for use in hypercalcemia of
malignancy - Dose 7.5 mg/kg per day for 3 days
- Risk of osteomalacia w/ prolonged therapy
- do not treat gt2 yrs
- No documented cases of BRONJ
15Pamidronate (Aredia)
- Available only as IV preparation b/c of poor GI
absorption and high freq of GI symptoms - Approved for tx of hypercalcemia of malignancy
- one-time dose of 60-90 mg
- Also used for Pagets disease
- Also used for osteoporosis pts who are unable to
tolerate other bisphosphonates
16Zolendronate (Zometa)
- Only available in IV preparation
- Approved for tx of hypercalcemia of malignancy
- 4mg IV over no less than 15 mins
17Alendronate (Fosamax)
- Available as oral preparation
- Osteoporosis
- Treatment dose 10 mg/day or 70 mg weekly
- Prevention dose 5 mg/day or 25 mg weekly
- Less inhibition of bone mineralization
- More suitable for long-term administration
18Risedronate (Actonel)
- Also available as oral preparation
- Approved for tx of osteoporosis
- 5 mg daily and 35 mg weekly
- Dose for prevention of osteoporosis is same as
for treatment
19Ibandronate (Boniva)
- Most recently approved for tx and prevention of
osteoporosis - 2.5mg daily or 150 mg monthly
20Bisphosphonate Side Effects
- Upset stomach
- Inflammation/erosions of esophagus
- Fever/flu-like symptoms
- Slight increased risk for electrolyte disturbance
- Uveitis
- Musculoskeletal joint pain
- And of course
21BRONJ
- Exposed, devitalized bone in maxillofacial region
- Prior history or current use of BP
- Vague pain, discomfort
- Spontaneous occurrence, or
- 2 surgery or trauma to oral soft tissue/bone
22BRONJ Clinical Presentation
- Exposed alveolar bone
- Open mucosal wound
- Necrotic bone
- Spontaneous or Traumatic
- Extractions, periodontal surgery, apicoectomy,
implant placement - Infection
- Purulence, bone pain
- Orocutaneous fistula
23BRONJ Clinical Presentation
- Subclinical Form
- asymptomatic
- radiographic signs
- Sclerosis of lamina dura
- Widening of PDL space
24Clinical Presentation (cont)
- Soft tissue abrasions
- Tissues rubbing against bone
- AND
25Pathologic Fracture
26Staging of BRONJ
- Proposed by AAOMS
- Patients at risk (Subclinical)
- No apparent exposed/necrotic bone in pts treated
w/ IV or oral BPs - Patients with BRONJ
- Stage 1 Exposed/necrotic bone, asymptomatic, no
infection - Stage 2 Exposed/necrotic bone, pain, clinical
evidence of infection - Stage 3 Exposed/necrotic bone, pain, infection,
one or more of the following - Pathologic fracture, extra-oral fistula,
osteolysis extending to inferior border
27BRONJ IV BPs
- More frequently
- Lesions more extensive
- All stages
- II, III more common
- Lower success with Tx
- Patients generally sicker
28Stage I Lesions
29Stage II Lesions
30Stage III Lesions
31Stage 0 Lesions
- Spontaneous onset numbness and pain
- No exposed bone
- No prior dental antecedent
- Positive image findings
- Sclerosis
- Positive bone scan
32BRONJ Historical Context
- Rare reports prior to 2001
- 2003 Marx reported 36 patients
- 2004 Ruggiero et al reported 63 pts (from
2001-2003) - 2005 Migliorati reported 5 cases
- 2005 Estilo et al reported 13 cases
- Sept. 2004 Novartis (manufacturer of Aredia
Zometa) altered labeling to include cautionary
language concerning osteonecrosis of the jaws - 2005 FDA issued warning for entire drug class
(including oral bisphosphonates)
33Phossy-Jaw A Historical Entity
- Lorinser, 1845 first reported cases
- Industrial laborers working w/ white phosphorus
powder - Matchmaking, fireworks factories
- Missile factories
- Clinical presentation
- Nonhealing mucosal wound following extraction
- Pain
- Fetid odor
- Suppuration
- Necrosis w/ bony sequestra
- Extra-oral fistulae
- Miles, Hunter 20 mortality due to infections
- Pre-antibiotic era
- Conservative treatment
- Selective debridement
34Similar Clinical Entities
- Closely resembles Osteopetrosis
- Loss of osteoclastic function
- Hypermineralization
- Fractures, nonunions, open oral wounds
- Endpoint bone necrosis, /- infection
35NOT to be confused with these other entities
- Osteoradionecrosis (ORN)
- avascular bone necrosis 2 radiation
- Osteomyelitis
- thrombosis of small blood vessels leading to
infection within bone marrow - Steroid-induced osteonecrosis
- more common in long bones
- exposed bone very rare
36BRONJ Model of Pathogenesis
37Estimated Incidence of BRONJ 2 IV BPs
- Limited to retrospective studies with limited
sample sizes - Marx
- Zometa exposed bone within 6-12 months
- Aredia 10-16 months
- Estimates of cumulative incidence of BRONJ range
from 0.8 to 12 - Marx 5-15
- Including Subclinical osteonecrosis
- Incidence will rise
- Increased recognition
- Increased duration of exposure
- Increased followup
38Estimated Incidence of BRONJ 2 Oral BPs
- gt190 million oral BP prescriptions dispensed
worldwide - Much lower risk for BRONJ vs IV administration
- Marx
- BRONJ development after 3 years of Alendronate
usage - Merck study
- incidence with Alendronate usage 0.7/100,000
person/years of exposure - Estimated incidence of BRONJ w/ weekly
administration of alendronate - 0.01 to 0.04
- After extractions, increased to 0.09 to 0.34
39Estimated Incidence/Prevalence of BRONJ 2 Oral
BPs
- Australian, German Studies
- .001 to .01 prevalance
- Lo, ORyan
- PROBE study, Kaiser Permanente
- Survey of 13,000 pts using oral BP
- Prevalence of BRONJ 0.06 (11,700)
40low numbers, sowhats all the hoopla for?
- Physicians prescribing these meds
- Endocrinologists, Oncologists, PCPs, OB-Gyns,etc
- Not well informed of adverse oral effects
- Hygienists, dentists diagnosing and managing the
problem - Lack of communication between Medicine and
Dentistry - likelihood of many cases unreported
- We are the expertstime to bridge the gap
- Effects of oral BPs lagging behind IV BPs
- Another few years for BRONJ to reveal itself
among the oral BP population
41Why Only in the Jaws?
- Dixon et al 1997
- Alveolar crest has high remodeling rate
- 10x tibia
- 5x mandible at level of IA canal
- 3.5x mandible at inferior border
- Greater uptake of Tc 99m in bone scans
- Occlusal forces
- Compression at root apex and furcations
- Tension on lamina dura and periodontal ligament
- Remodeling of lamina dura in response
- Reduced remodeling with BP uptake ?
hypermineralization - Sclerotic appearance of Lamina dura
- Widening of periodontal ligament space
42BRONJ Case Definition
- AAOMS Position Paper (updated September 2009)
- Patients considered to have BRONJ if all 3
characteristics met - Current or previous treatment with a
bisphosphonate - Exposed, necrotic bone in maxillofacial region
persisting gt 8 weeks - No history of radiation therapy to jaws
43Risk Factors for Development of BRONJ
- Drug-related factors
- Potency of BP
- Zoledronate gt pamidronate gt oral BPs
- Duration of therapy
- Local factors
- Dentoalveolar surgery
- Extractions, implants, periapical surgery,
periodontal surgery w/ osseous injury - 7-fold risk for BRONJ with IV BPs
- 5 to 21-fold risk in some studies
- Local anatomy
- lingual tori, mylohyoid ridge, palatal tori
- Mandible gt maxilla (21)
- Concomitant oral disease
- 7-fold risk for BRONJ with IV BPs
44Risk factors (continued)
- Demographic/systemic factors
- Age 9 increased risk for every passing decade
- Multiple myeloma patients treated w/ IV BPs
- Race Caucasian
- Cancer diagnosis
- multiple myeloma gt breast cancer gt other cancers
- Osteopenia/osteoporosis diagnosis concurrent w/
cancer diagnosis - Additional risk factors
- Corticosteroid therapy
- Diabetes
- Smoking
- EtOH
- Poor oral hygiene
- Chemotherapeutic drugs
45Subclinical Risk Assessment
- Early signs of BP toxicity
- Radiographs
- Panoramic, PA films
- Sclerosis of alveolus, lamina dura
- Widening of PDL space
- Clinical exam
- Tooth mobility
- Unrelated to alveolar bone loss
- Deep bone pain with no apparent etiology
46Risk Assessment Bone Turnover Markers
- Bone Turnover Markers
- Most assess bone formation
- AP, osteocalcin
- Marx Serum CTX marker
- Bone resorption
- Oral BP risk
- Type I collagen telopeptide assay
- ELISA/RIA Quest Diagnostics
- Cleaved at carboxyl end by osteoclast in bone
resorption - NTX marker cleaved at amine end
- Requires 1 mL whole blood fasting
47Serum CTX Peptide
- Low values high risk
- Little osteoclastic function
- Marx, et al 2007 (JOMS)
- 17 pts on oral BPs gt 5 years
- CTX before/after drug holiday (6mos)
- Before drug holiday
- CTX range 30-102 pg/mL
- After drug holiday
- CTX range 162-343 pg/mL over 6 months
- Improved mucosal healing
- Drug holiday allows for osteoclast recovery
- 4-6 months reasonable, safe, and minimizes risk
of BRONJ
48Treatment Goals
- Preserve Quality of Life
- Pain Control
- Treat 2 infection
- Prevent extension
49What this means for you as a practitioner
- Routine dental care a MUST for BRONJ pts and
Non-BRONJ pts taking BPs - dental prophylaxis
- nonoperative periodontal care
- restorative procedures
- conventional fixed and removable prosthodontics
- Invasive procedures on case-by-case basis
- Elective oral surgery
- apical surgery
- periodontal bone recontouring
- implants
- orthodontic tooth movement
-
50Treatment Strategies
- Patients about to initiate IV bisphosphonate tx
- Objective minimize risk of developing BRONJ
- Dental prophylaxis, caries control, conservative
restorative dentistry - Adjustment of denture flanges to minimize mucosal
trauma - Extraction of nonrestorable teeth
- Completion of elective dentoalveolar surgery
- If systemic conditions permit
- Delay Bisphosphonate therapy until dental health
optimized - 14-21 days after extractions
51Treatment Strategies
- Asymptomatic patients receiving IV BPs
- Maintenance of good oral hygiene, dental care
- Avoid invasive procedures
- Nonrestorable teeth
- Remove crowns
- Endodontic treatment of remaining roots
- Avoid placement of implants
52Treatment Strategies
- Asymptomatic patients receiving oral BPs
- Less than 3 years with no clinical risk factors
- No alteration or delay in elective surgery
- Implants permitted
- Discuss risks
- Regular recall schedule
- Discuss with PCP re alternate dosing, drug
holidays, BP alternatives
53Treatment Strategies
- Asymptomatic patients receiving oral BPs
(continued) - Less than 3 years, concomitant steroid use
- Contact PCP re drug holiday for at least 3
months prior to surgery - Restarted after osseous healing complete (3
months) - More than 3 years, with/without concomitant
steroid use - Contact PCP re drug holiday for 3 months prior
to oral surgery - Restarted after osseous healing complete
- CTX???
54Treatment Strategies
- Patients with Established Diagnosis of BRONJ
- Objectives eliminate pain, control infection,
minimize progression/occurrence of necrosis - Marx
- debridement may worsen condition
- Removal of bone serving as soft tissue irritant,
loose bony sequestra - Without exposure of uninvolved bone
- Extraction of teeth within exposed, necrotic bone
- Avoid elective dentoalveolar surgery
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58Treatment Strategies
- Stage III disease
- Pathologic fractures, refractory cases
- Preservation of function
- Airway, speech compromise with large mandible
resections - Segmental resections, titanium plate
reconstruction, external fixation. - All infections must be cleared first
- Delay reconstruction up to 3 months
- Avoid bone grafting
59Summary of Treatment Strategies
60Summary
- BPs are associated with BRONJ
- Direct causal relationship not established
- Increased potency (nitrogen), dosing frequency,
duration associated w/ increase risk - No recommended duration to be on drug
- For Asymptomatic patients taking BPs
- Review AAOMS Guidelines
- Thorough medication history dont just ask if
they take BPs - Routine dental care a necessity to maintain
optimal oral health - Elective surgery - Review on case-by-case basis
- CTX, drug holiday
61Summary
- Pts with BRONJ
- Review AAOMS guidelines
- Stage I, II lesions early recognition,
conservative mgmt - No debridement unless loose bony sequestrum
- Stage III lesions resection and reconstruction
most predictable tx outcome - Routine dental care a necessity
- No Elective surgery
- There is a Stage 0 bone pain, paresthesia, no
open wound. Get Xray, bone scan! - BRONJ 2 Oral BP better success rate than IVBP
- Discontinuing BP improves healing over long-term
- TALK to the Medicine folks.share your
knowledge!!!!!