Oral Bisphosphonates Linked to Cancer

Updated: July 4, 2023

Pills on open hand

Original Article From ABC News By John Gever, MedPage Today

Oral Bisphosphonates, Taken by Millions of Americans, May Increase Cancer Risk With Long Term Use

A second look at British registry data indicates that esophageal cancer may be more common after all in patients taking oral bisphosphonate drugs, a type of drug used to treat osteoporosis, for long periods.

In an analysis involving some 80,000 patients tracked for more than seven years on average, individuals diagnosed with esophageal cancer of were 1.93 times as likely to have received at least 10 prescriptions for oral bisphosphonates compared with controls not having cancer, reported Dr. Jane Green of the University of Oxford in England and colleagues online in BMJ.

While previous research has not found such a connection between osteoporosis drugs and cancer, this most recent study tracked patients for long periods of time, suggesting that long-term use of the medications may be linked to cancer development.

“Our study … had the potential to include people with longer durations of bisphosphonate use and also had greater statistical power,” Green and colleagues asserted.

An accompanying editorial by Diane Wysowski, an epidemiologist with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, noted that links between bisphosphonates and esophageal cancer have been proposed for more than 15 years — though the editorial made clear that this is not necessarily reflective of the agency’s position on the matter.

The FDA has collected a total of 68 case reports of esophageal cancer in patients taking bisphosphonates — half in the United States and the rest in Europe and Japan — but has not ordered label warnings. Prescribing information for oral bisphosphonates does include information on risks of other esophageal effects such as erosions and strictures, and dosing instructions are geared toward speeding the drugs through the esophagus.

The suggestion of a connection between these agents and esophageal cancer have prompted efforts at systematic research, including the new study.

Green and colleagues examined records of 2,954 patients with esophageal cancer, 2,018 patients with stomach cancer, and 10,641 with colon cancer, along with five controls for each of these cases matched for age, sex, observation time prior to diagnosis, and practice location.

About 3.1 percent of the esophageal cancer patients had received at least one bisphosphonate prescription before diagnosis, compared with 2.4 percent of the controls over a similar period.
Rates of bisphosphonate use were similar in the stomach and colon cancer patients relative to controls, the researchers found.

In the esophageal cancer patients, the relationship with bisphosphonate use appeared to strengthen with the number of prescriptions and with the estimated duration of use.

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Lara Pizzorno
MDiv, MA, LMT - Best-selling author of Healthy Bones Healthy You! and Your Bones; Editor of Longevity Medicine Review, and Senior Medical Editor for Integrative Medicine Advisors.,
Dr. Liz Lipski
PhD, CNS, FACN, IFMP, BCHN, LDN - Professor and Director of Academic Development, Nutrition programs in Clinical Nutrition at Maryland University of Integrative Health.,
Dr. Emma Gasinski
PT, DPT, RYT - Physical therapist and certified yoga teacher with a Doctorate in Physical Therapy from Rocky Mountain University of Health Professionals,
Dr. Lawrence (Larry) A. May
MD, FACP, Harvard Medical School Graduate, Physician, Author, Public Speaker - Doctor of Internal Medicine at Providence Cedars-Sinai Tarzana Medical Center and author of several articles and books, including the widely utilized and best selling medical textbook Primary Care Medicine,