Several recently published papers in JSCC [1,2,3,4,5,6,7] dealt with the prevalence of medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw (MRONJ) in patients receiving antiresorptive drugs (bisphosphonates and denosumab) and offered us the chance for some considerations about the medical treatment of bone metastases in solid cancer patients.

In our view, uncertainty about drug selection and optimal duration of antiresorptive treatment in patients with bone metastases from solid cancers has increased lately.

The choice of a given antiresorptive medication depends on several aspects:

  • available data on the efficacy of antiresorptive medications in the bone metastatic population as a whole, or in specific subgroups (i.e., breast vs. prostate vs. renal cell vs. lung cancer; metastatic cancer subtypes with different aggressiveness);

  • direct (drug price for the individuals and/or the healthcare systems) and indirect costs (facilities, personnel costs for intravenous or subcutaneous administration, monitoring of calcium and creatinine levels, regular oral health check-ups, etc.);

  • risk of short-term and long-term side effects in general and in high-risk subgroups (i.e., elderly people, patients with already partially impaired renal function, patients with compromised oral health, etc.) [8].

Real-world medical treatment of bone metastases radically changed in the last decade for the following reasons:

  • introduction of denosumab: 120 mg monthly subcutaneous injection, with several patients already receiving zoledronic acid (or other bisphosphonates), shifted to denosumab, and many others started on denosumab from the beginning [1, 4, 7];

  • introduction of zoledronic acid every 3 months: (upfront or after a period of monthly treatment) as a possible competitor [9];

  • fear of the rebound effect described following denosumab discontinuation and its management [10];

  • difference among competing drugs and schedules in term of costs, ease of administration, staff engagement, etc. [8, 9], with the COVID-19 pandemic likely to interfere with the routine preferences;

  • increased awareness that skeletal-related events (SREs) — the most used study endpoint in earlier antiresorptive drug trials — are not fully reliable, and the introduction of new endpoints, so called symptomatic skeletal events (SSEs) [11];

  • increase of expected survival for a large proportion of bone metastatic cancer patients due to the recent advances of medical treatment (endocrine therapy, chemotherapy, targeted treatments, immunotherapy);

  • influence of MRONJ risk evaluation, given the possible MRONJ-related worsening of patient quality of life, on antiresorptive treatment planning and management, despite several controversies still exist about MRONJ definition, diagnosis, and therapy [12,13,14].

At present, three main established therapies (competitors) exist; we should choose from monthly zoledronic acid, monthly denosumab, and quarterly zoledronic acid. To further complicate the picture, combinations of these therapies are possible: shift from zoledronic acid to denosumab or vice versa [1, 4], planned shift from monthly administrations of denosumab or zoledronic acid to quarterly zoledronic acid infusion [1, 4], and suggested strategies of quarterly 120 mg denosumab [9].

Is there a mutual view resulting from recommendations of the Scientific Societies and expert groups? The recently published practice guidelines and recommendations [15,16,17] did not address all the differences among the competitors otherwise helpful in real-world practice [8, 9], and do not endorse any specific antiresorptive treatment in terms of drug selection and planned duration (Table 1).

Table 1 Antiresorptive treatment options for bone metastases from solid cancer. Comparison of some recommendations and practice guidelines

Should we outweigh the risk of MRONJ in the clinical practice when we must select the antiresorptive drug and the optimal duration of treatment in patients with bone metastases from solid cancers?

It is our belief that the following underestimated facts should be taken into consideration when choosing the appropriate treatment for patients in the real-world practice:

  • MRONJ incidence (or prevalence or frequency) in cancer patients with bone metastases, reported in large trials as of 1–2%, is largely underestimated, for a number of reasons [14];

  • MRONJ risk described in recent papers reporting real-life experiences is much higher than previously reported, with values ranging between 5 and 15%, both in patients receiving antiresorptive drugs only and in those receiving antiresorptive together with biological agents (bevacizumab, tyrosine kinase inhibitors, everolimus, etc.) [3, 7, 18,19,20];

  • most recent reports display Kaplan–Meier actuarial curves (data not shown from randomized trials with limited follow-up) that might be helpful to perceive the uprising risk of MRONJ with longer observation times (2–4 years), especially in patients on long-term antiresorptive treatment;

  • MRONJ risk seems to increase with longer duration of antiresorptive treatment but also with longer observation time: could it happen independently from the duration of treatment? We need more data after long-term observation, and data about survival of MRONJ patients, to be compared with survival data of other bone metastatic patients [21];

  • MRONJ rate increases in bone metastatic cancer patients receiving denosumab as compared with zoledronic acid [3, 7, 18] with even higher rates in patients shifted from zoledronic acid to denosumab [1, 4, 18, 19]. This fact matches the observations made 10 years ago, when many cases of MRONJ were reported in cancer patients shifted from pamidronate to zoledronic acid [1, 4]. At present, we do not know how much of this phenomenon might be linked to denosumab itself or to the length of treatment and/or follow-up;

  • we do not know yet how the MRONJ risk might change in patients shifted from monthly denosumab to quarterly zoledronic acid or quarterly denosumab (whereas we have limited but encouraging data after the shift from monthly to quarterly zoledronic acid) [15];

  • recently, the surgical treatment of established MRONJ showed some evidence of benefit for patients in terms of curative potential [13]. Healing of MRONJ could be anticipated with surgery and, ideally, favor the restart of the antiresorptive treatment. Nevertheless, not all recommendations endorse the surgical option [12] that still remains object of discussion [13, 14];

  • surgical treatment of MRONJ in cancer patients has been contraindicated for a long time, based on their expected short survival and/or supposedly poor cost–benefit analyses. With the improvement of medical anticancer treatments, many MRONJ patients show prolonged survival with performance status and general health conditions good enough to make surgery of MRONJ feasible and adequate during their anticancer treatment [13, 14, 21].

In conclusion, individualized judgment of the appropriate antiresorptive treatment for bone metastatic cancer patients becomes everyday more challenging. Future research should promote large trials to answer the remaining open questions and guide prescribers, in the light of the uniqueness of each patient, to seek a true precision medicine.