Denosumab has a higher risk of jaw osteonecrosis
To see how often ONJ occurred, Dr. Brunner and her colleagues screened a database for every person with breast cancer living in a certain Austrian state from 2000 to 2020.
They found 639 people with breast cancer that had spread to the bone and who had received denosumab, a bisphosphonate, or both medicines. Both types of drugs were taken once per month.
Overall, 56, or 9%, of these patients developed ONJ, the researchers found. A higher percentage of people who took denosumab developed ONJ than those who took a bisphosphonate (12% versus 3%). People who took a bisphosphonate followed by denosumab had the highest rate of ONJ (16%).
However, it is unusual for patients to take both drugs, Dr. Lipkowitz pointed out. The few patients in the study who did receive the combination likely started taking a bisphosphonate and then switched to denosumab after it became the
standard treatment in 2010, he explained.
One limitation of the study is that patients didn’t get a dental exam before they started the treatment, said Cesar Migliorati, D.D.S., Ph.D., of the University of Florida’s College of Dentistry. So, it’s unclear how many patients had gum disease or a tooth infection—two major
risk factors for ONJ—before starting the treatment.
If a lot of the patients had underlying dental disease, that could have raised the rate of ONJ, explained Dr. Migliorati, who wasn’t involved in the Austrian study but was among the first to report a link between ONJ and bone-modifying drugs.