Purpose: To evaluate the clinical improvement and radiographically monitor the effect of local radiotherapy in conjunction with disodium pamidronate (DP) on metastatic osteolytic disease.
Methods and materials: Thirty-three patients with osteolytic metastasis from advanced breast cancer received radiotherapy with a 6-MV linear accelerator up to a dose of 30 Gy (3 Gy/fraction, 5 d/wk) combined with 24 monthly sessions of a 180-mg DP infusion. Conventional X-rays were obtained during the first six sessions of DP treatment, retaining the same settings for each exposure. The analysis of the image attributes was based on measuring the first-order statistics of the mean value and energy of gray-level histograms in the osteolytic region.
Results: The 6-month measurements compared with baseline showed statistically significant differences (p < 0.01, Wilcoxon test) in energy of gray-level histogram (-10.8%), mean value of gray-level histogram (+9.5%), pain score (-5.8 points), Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group status (-2.4 points), urine hydroxyproline/creatinine ratio (-41.7%), urine calcium/creatinine ratio (-58.8%), and bone alkaline phosphatase (-42.4%). Quality of life as determined by the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Core Quality of Life Questionnaire (version 3) also improved. During follow-up, 88% of patients had complete and 12% partial responses (International Union Against Cancer radiologic criteria). On multivariate analysis, greater changes in the mean value of the gray-level histogram and negative nodal status were predictors for a reduction in the number of skeletal complications after therapy. Flu-like syndrome occurred in 13 patients (39%) and was well managed with mild antipyretics.
Conclusion: Image-processing in plain radiographs offers an objective way to assess recalcification. The image-processing indexes, along with the measurements of performance status, quality of life, and biochemical markers, improved significantly. Local radiotherapy combined with long-term high-dose DP up to 180 mg is tolerable and has a high therapeutic response.