FDA WARNING: Osteoporosis Drug Side Effects

by | Jan 9, 2008

FDA Warns of Potential Side Effects of Bisphosphonate Use

Source: http://www.aafp.org/online/en/home/publications/news/news-now/clinical-care-research/20080109bisphosphonates.html
By News Staff 1/9/2008
Earlier this week, the FDA issued an alert highlighting the possibility of severe and sometimes incapacitating bone, joint and/or muscle pain in patients taking bisphosphonates. The agency is encouraging health care professionals to assess whether severe musculoskeletal pain in patients taking bisphosphonates, which are frequently prescribed to treat or prevent osteoporosis, could be attributed to their use of these drugs and to consider temporarily or permanently discontinuing their use.
The severe musculoskeletal pain that prompted the alert may occur within days, months, or years after starting a bisphosphonate and should not be confused with the acute phase response that sometimes accompanies initial administration of intravenous bisphosphonates and that also may occur with initial exposure to once-weekly or once-monthly doses of oral bisphosphonates, say FDA officials. The symptoms related to the acute phase response, which may include fever, chills, bone pain, myalgias and arthralgias, typically resolve within several days with continued drug use.
In contrast, the musculoskeletal pain symptoms described in the FDA alert may or may not resolve after discontinuing bisphosphonate use. Some patients have reported complete relief of symptoms after discontinuing the bisphosphonate, whereas others have reported slow or incomplete resolution.
The risk factors for and incidence of severe musculoskeletal pain associated with bisphosphonates are unknown.
Bisphosphonates decrease bone resorption by inhibiting osteoclast activity or through other mechanisms. Among the agents included in this class of drugs are alendronate sodium, marketed both as a generic and under the brand name Fosamax; ibandronate sodium, marketed as Boniva; and risedronate sodium, marketed as Actonel. Each of these drugs is indicated and widely prescribed for the treatment or prevention of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women.
Additional bisphosphonates currently approved for use in the United States are etidronate disodium, sold as Didronel; pamidronate disodium, sold as Aredia; tiludronate disodium, sold as Skelid; and zoledronic acid, sold (for different indications) under the brand names Reclast and Zometa.
Other indications for which agents in this class of drugs are used include:

  • treatment of glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis in men and women,
  • treatment of Paget’s disease of bone in men and women,
  • prevention and treatment of heterotopic ossification associated with total hip replacement or spinal cord injury,
  • treatment of hypercalcemia of malignancy, and
  • management of patients with multiple myeloma and bone metastases from solid tumors.

Further background information, as well as additional recommendations and considerations for physicians and other health care providers, is available online from the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.
Adverse events associated with use of these or any other drugs should be reported to the FDA’s MedWatch program.

Ivermectin + Mebendazole taken together produce remarkably Positive Clinical Cancer Benefits in 84.4% of Patients.

The largest real-world human analysis to date evaluating ivermectin and mebendazole in cancer patients has just been published—and the results represent one of the most compelling clinical signals ever documented for repurposed anti-parasitic therapies in oncology.

This groundbreaking analysis was made possible through a unique collaboration between The Wellness Company, the McCullough Foundation, and the Chairman of the President’s Cancer Panel (Dr. Harvey Risch)—uniting real-world clinical data, frontline medical experience, and high-level epidemiologic expertise to deliver urgently needed insights in oncology.

This was a real-world prospective clinical program evaluation of 197 cancer patients, with 122 completing a follow-up survey at about six months (61.9% response rate).

Cancer patients were prescribed compounded ivermectin–mebendazole, with each capsule containing 25 mg ivermectin and 250 mg mebendazole—most commonly taken at 1–2 capsules per day.

The cohort represented a clinically relevant population, including a wide variety cancer types, with 37.1% of patients reporting actively progressing disease at baseline and many having already undergone chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery.

At six months, 84.4% of cancer patients reported clinical benefit (Clinical Benefit Ratio: 84.4% [95% CI: 77.0–89.8%]):

✅ 32.8% reported NO evidence of cancer (95% CI: 25.1–41.5%)
✅ 15.6% reported tumor regression (95% CI: 10.2–23.0%)
✅ 36.1% reported stable disease (95% CI: 28.1–44.9%)

Treatment adherence was high, with 86.9% completing the full protocol and 66.4% remaining on therapy at six months.

The regimen was well tolerated, with 25.4% reporting side effects, primarily mild and gastrointestinal, and over 93% continuing treatment despite these events.

Patients were treated in real-world conditions alongside concurrent therapies, including chemotherapy (27.9%), radiation (21.3%), surgery (19.7%), supplements (49.2%), and dietary modification (37.7%), supporting use as an adjunctive approach.

Together, these findings represent a large, internally consistent real-world clinical signal that supports URGENT further investigation of ivermectin and mebendazole as low-toxicity, adjunctive cancer therapies.

Given the strength of the signal observed here, advancing this line of investigation is no longer optional—it is necessary.

This is NOT the end. We will continue advancing this work with larger datasets to further define and validate the role of anti-parasitics in cancer outcomes.

The manuscript is now available as a preprint on the Zenodo research repository, operated by the European Organization for Nuclear Research, while undergoing peer review at leading oncology journals: “Real-World Clinical Outcomes of Ivermectin and Mebendazole in Cancer Patients: Results from a Prospective Observational Cohort.”

Bar chart showing distribution of common cancer types with breast cancer most prevalent.
Infographic on disease status and median duration since diagnosis.

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