Use of bisphosphonates to prevent
osteoporosis seen as possible new class for cancer prevention
An international team of researchers has found that the
use of bisphosphonates - drugs already taken by millions of healthy women to prevent
osteoporosis - for more than one year was associated with a 50 percent reduction
in the risk of postmenopausal colorectal cancer. The results were published in
the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
According to lead researcher Prof. Gad Rennert, M.D., Ph.D., of the Technion-Israel
Institute of Technology Faculty of Medicine and chairman of the Department of
Community Medicine and Epidemiology at the Carmel Medical Center of Clalit Health
Services, these findings further support the role of bisphosphonates as a possible
new drug class for cancer prevention.
"We formerly identified a new class of drugs associated with a reduced
risk of breast cancer," said Rennert. "And, now, by showing a similar
effect on colorectal cancer risk reduction, we can assume that this class of medications
has a broad effect - not necessarily limited to a specific cancer site."
Such an effect, if proven in randomized trials, could lead to the recommendation
for the use of these medications by the general population for cancer prevention,
he added.
Rennert and colleagues extracted data from the Molecular Epidemiology of Colorectal
Cancer (MECC) study, a population-based case-control study in northern Israel,
conducted together with senior author Stephen Gruber, M.D., MPH, Ph.D. of the
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Using pharmacy records, the team evaluated
the use of bisphosphonates in 1,866 postmenopausal female participants.
The researchers found that the use of bisphosphonates prior to diagnosis was
strongly associated with a significant reduced relative risk for colorectal cancer
- even after making adjustments for a large variety of known risk or protective
factors for colorectal cancer such as family history, dietary components, physical
activity, body mass index, and the use of other medications such as aspirin, statins
and hormone replacement therapy.
"Bisphosphonates share the same mevalonate metabolic pathway as do statins,
which we have previously shown to be associated with risk reduction of colorectal
cancer," said Dr. Gruber. "This fact adds to the credibility of the
current finding by adding biological plausibility."
"While the disease is generally caused by bad dietary habits and lack
of physical activity, it can possibly be prevented by several medications, such
as aspirin and cholesterol-lowering medication of the statins group," said
Prof. Rennert. "And now, we can add bisphosphonates to the list of tools
for potential prevention of colorectal cancer."
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