American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy 1995-10-15

Strontium chloride Sr 89 for treating pain from metastatic bone disease.

B Nightengale, M Brune, S P Blizzard, M Ashley-Johnson, S Slan

Index: Am. J. Health Syst. Pharm. 52(20) , 2189-95, (1995)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

The role of strontium chloride Sr 89 in the palliative treatment of pain associated with metastatic bone disease is reviewed. Conventional therapies to relieve metastatic bone pain include nonopioid and opioid analgesics, hormonal therapy, external-beam irradiation, and chemotherapy. Limitations in the long-term safety and effectiveness of these treatments have increased interest in using systemic radioactive isotopes for palliation of pain. Strontium chloride Sr 89 is a relatively new bone-seeking radiopharmaceutical that has FDA-approved labeling for use in relieving pain associated with skeletal metastases. An analogue of calcium, strontium chloride Sr 89 is rapidly cleared from the blood after i.v. injection. The agent selectively irradiates metastatic sites while generally sparing normal soft-bone tissue. In clinical studies, a majority of patients with prostate or breast cancer obtained substantial relief from bone pain after receiving strontium chloride Sr 89 alone or in combination with external-beam irradiation. Adverse effects tend to be mild, but patients should be monitored for possible hematologic toxicity. Patients should discontinue any calcium-containing products before receiving the agent. The typical dose is 4 mCi (148 MBq) administered by slow i.v. push over one to two minutes; doses can be repeated at three-month intervals. Pain relief usually begins in 10-20 days and lasts up to six months. Radiation safety measures are necessary in handling strontium chloride Sr 89 and the wastes of patients. Strontium chloride Sr 89 is costly, but preliminary analysis indicates that it may reduce management expenditures overall.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Tracking mobility using human hair: What can we learn from lead and strontium isotopes?

2015-01-01

[Sci. Justice 55(1) , 63-71, (2015)]

Analysis of radium-226 in high salinity wastewater from unconventional gas extraction by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry.

2015-03-03

[Environ. Sci. Technol. 49(5) , 2969-76, (2015)]

Diagnostic use of cerebral and extracerebral oxysterols.

2004-02-01

[Clin. Chem. Lab Med. 42(2) , 186-91, (2004)]

Levels of 7-oxocholesterol in cerebrospinal fluid are more than one thousand times lower than reported in multiple sclerosis.

2005-02-01

[J. Lipid Res. 46(2) , 191-5, (2005)]

Disruption of thiol homeostasis and nitrosative stress in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with active multiple sclerosis: evidence for a protective role of acetylcarnitine.

2003-09-01

[Neurochem. Res. 28(9) , 1321-8, (2003)]

More Articles...