R. Sciuto et al., RADIOSENSITIZATION WITH LOW-DOSE CARBOPLATIN ENHANCES PAIN PALLIATIONIN RADIOISOTOPE THERAPY WITH SR-89, Nuclear medicine communications, 17(9), 1996, pp. 799-804
Strontium-89 (Sr-89) is currently used for the treatment of painful bo
ne metastases. This study reports the use of low-dose carboplatin as a
radiosensitizer in Sr-89 radioisotope therapy. The study design compr
ised two groups: 15 patients treated with Sr-89 (148 MBq) followed by
carboplatin (100 mg m(-2) at 7 and 21 days) and 15 patients treated wi
th Sr-89 alone. Their pain response was assessed 8 weeks post-injectio
n. Follow-up was continued for up to 1 year in the survivors. Twenty-s
even patients were evaulable. A pain response was observed in 20 of 27
(74%) patients. The pain response in the patients treated with Sr-89
and carboplatin was clearly superior to that seen in the patients trea
ted with Sr-89 alone (P = 0.025), whereas survival was only marginally
better in the combined treatment group (8.1 vs 5.7 months, P = 0.19).
No clinically significant adverse effects or myelosuppression by carb
oplatin were observed. Low-dose carboplatin enhances the effects of Sr
-89 radioisotope therapy on pain from bone metastases.