Welcome to NGC. Skip directly to: Search Box, Navigation, Content.


Brief Summary

GUIDELINE TITLE

Procedure guideline for palliative treatment of painful bone metastases.

BIBLIOGRAPHIC SOURCE(S)

  • Silberstein EB, Buscombe JR, McEwan A, Taylor AT Jr. Procedure guideline for palliative treatment of painful bone metastases, 3.0. Reston (VA): Society of Nuclear Medicine; 2003 Jan 25. 8 p. [17 references]

GUIDELINE STATUS

This is the current release of the guideline.

This guideline updates a previous version: Society of Nuclear Medicine. Procedure guideline for bone pain treatment, 2.0. Reston (VA): Society of Nuclear Medicine; 1999 Feb. 26 p. (Society of Nuclear Medicine procedure guidelines; no. 2.0).

BRIEF SUMMARY CONTENT

 
RECOMMENDATIONS
 EVIDENCE SUPPORTING THE RECOMMENDATIONS
 IDENTIFYING INFORMATION AND AVAILABILITY
 DISCLAIMER

 Go to the Complete Summary

RECOMMENDATIONS

MAJOR RECOMMENDATIONS

Background Information and Definitions

  1. Definitions
    1. 89Sr therapy means the intravenous injection of the radionuclide 89Sr as strontium chloride. 89Sr-chloride emits a beta particle with maximum energy 1.46 MeV, mean energy 0.58 MeV, average soft-tissue range 2.4 mm, and 0.01% abundant gamma emission with a photopeak of 0.91 MeV. It has a 50.5-d physical half-life.
    2. 153Sm-lexidronam therapy means the intravenous injection of the radionuclide 153Sm chelated to ethylene diamine tetramethylene phosphonate. 153Sm emits a beta particle with maximum energy 0.81 MeV, mean energy 0.23 MeV, average soft-tissue range 0.6 mm, and 28% abundant gamma emission with a photopeak of 0.103 MeV. It has a 1.9-d physical half-life.
    3. 32P therapy means the intravenous injection or oral administration of the radionuclide 32P as sodium phosphate. 32P-sodium phosphate emits a beta particle with maximum energy of 1.71 MeV, mean energy 0.70 MeV, average soft-tissue range 3.0 mm, and no gamma emission. It has a 14.3-d physical half-life.
    4. "Osteoblastic" or "osteoblastic metastases" means a focus or foci of increased activity on bone scintigraphy caused by osseous reaction to tumor in bone. These may appear osteoblastic or osteolytic on radiographs.
  2. Background

    Intravenous injection of 89Sr-chloride and 153Sm-lexidronam and intravenous or oral administration of 32P-sodium phosphate have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of bone pain resulting from osteoblastic metastasis as defined by bone scan. Physicians involved in treating such patients should have an understanding of the natural history of the disease process and should be able to collaborate closely with the physician (or group of physicians) handling the overall management of the patient's disease.

    The administration of these agents falls under the guidelines of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), Title 10 CFR Part 35.300 or Agreement State Institutional License. Institutional licenses must specifically list individuals licensed to use Section 35.300 materials.

    As other radiopharmaceuticals are approved by the FDA for the treatment of bone pain resulting from osteoblastic metastases, they will be added to the guideline.

Common Indications

32P-sodium phosphate, 89Sr-chloride, and 153Sm-lexidronam (and the other unsealed beta or conversion electron-emitting radiopharmaceuticals under development or approved in countries outside the United States, e.g., 186Re-etidronate) are indicated for the treatment of bone pain resulting from a metastatic malignancy that has involved multiple skeletal sites and has evoked an osteoblastic response on bone scintigraphy. Where there is danger of either spinal cord compression from vertebral metastases or pathologic fracture in the extremities, 32P-sodium phosphate, 89Sr-chloride, or 153Sm-lexidronam therapy should only be used in conjunction with other forms of management directed at these complications and after management of the acute presentation.

Procedure

The detailed procedure recommendations in the guideline address the following areas: facility/personnel; patient preparation; information pertinent to performing the procedure (i.e., important data that the physician should have about the patient at the time the exam is performed and interpreted); instructions for patients; precautions; information regarding the radiopharmaceutical (i.e., ranges of administered activity, organ receiving the largest radiation dose, effective dose), image acquisition; guidelines for measuring the activity of 32P-Sodium Phosphate, 89Sr-Chloride, or 153Sm-Lexidronam to be administered; interventions; processing; interpretation/reporting; quality control; and sources of error.

CLINICAL ALGORITHM(S)

None provided

EVIDENCE SUPPORTING THE RECOMMENDATIONS

TYPE OF EVIDENCE SUPPORTING THE RECOMMENDATIONS

The type of evidence supporting the recommendations is not specifically stated.

IDENTIFYING INFORMATION AND AVAILABILITY

BIBLIOGRAPHIC SOURCE(S)

  • Silberstein EB, Buscombe JR, McEwan A, Taylor AT Jr. Procedure guideline for palliative treatment of painful bone metastases, 3.0. Reston (VA): Society of Nuclear Medicine; 2003 Jan 25. 8 p. [17 references]

ADAPTATION

Not applicable: The guideline was not adapted from another source.

DATE RELEASED

1999 Feb (updated 2003 Jun 20)

GUIDELINE DEVELOPER(S)

Society of Nuclear Medicine, Inc - Medical Specialty Society

SOURCE(S) OF FUNDING

Society of Nuclear Medicine (SNM)

GUIDELINE COMMITTEE

Task Force

COMPOSITION OF GROUP THAT AUTHORED THE GUIDELINE

Authors: Edward B. Silberstein, MD (University of Cincinnati Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH); John R. Buscombe, MD (Royal Free Hospital, London, UK); Alexander McEwan, MD (Cross Cancer Institute, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada); and Andrew T. Taylor, Jr., MD (Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA)

FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES/CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

Not stated

GUIDELINE STATUS

This is the current release of the guideline.

This guideline updates a previous version: Society of Nuclear Medicine. Procedure guideline for bone pain treatment, 2.0. Reston (VA): Society of Nuclear Medicine; 1999 Feb. 26 p. (Society of Nuclear Medicine procedure guidelines; no. 2.0).

GUIDELINE AVAILABILITY

Electronic copies: Available from the Society of Nuclear Medicine (SNM) Web site.

Print copies: Available from SNM, Division of Health Care Policy, 1850 Samuel Morse Dr, Reston, VA 20190-5316; Phone: 1-800-513-6853 or 1-703-326-1186; Fax: 703-708-9015; E-Mail: ServiceCenter@snm.org.

AVAILABILITY OF COMPANION DOCUMENTS

The following are available:

Print copies: Available from SNM, Division of Health Care Policy, 1850 Samuel Morse Dr, Reston, VA 20190-5316; Phone: 1-800-513-6853 or 1-703-326-1186; Fax: 703-708-9015; E-Mail: ServiceCenter@snm.org.

PATIENT RESOURCES

None available

NGC STATUS

This summary was completed by ECRI on May 20, 1999. It was verified by the guideline developer as of May 26, 1999. This summary was updated by ECRI on April 14, 2005.

COPYRIGHT STATEMENT

This NGC summary is based on the original guideline, which is subject to the guideline developer's copyright restrictions.

DISCLAIMER

NGC DISCLAIMER

The National Guideline Clearinghouse™ (NGC) does not develop, produce, approve, or endorse the guidelines represented on this site.

All guidelines summarized by NGC and hosted on our site are produced under the auspices of medical specialty societies, relevant professional associations, public or private organizations, other government agencies, health care organizations or plans, and similar entities.

Guidelines represented on the NGC Web site are submitted by guideline developers, and are screened solely to determine that they meet the NGC Inclusion Criteria which may be found at http://www.guideline.gov/about/inclusion.aspx .

NGC, AHRQ, and its contractor ECRI Institute make no warranties concerning the content or clinical efficacy or effectiveness of the clinical practice guidelines and related materials represented on this site. Moreover, the views and opinions of developers or authors of guidelines represented on this site do not necessarily state or reflect those of NGC, AHRQ, or its contractor ECRI Institute, and inclusion or hosting of guidelines in NGC may not be used for advertising or commercial endorsement purposes.

Readers with questions regarding guideline content are directed to contact the guideline developer.


 

 

   
DHHS Logo