MRONJ Flashcards
What is MRONJ?
Medication related osteonecrosis of the jaw
- caused by medication that leads to necrosis and death of the bone
- exposed or non healing bone present for more than 8 weeks
- the drugs that cause this reduce bone turnover and accumulate in sites of high bone turnover such as the jaw
What are the symptoms of MRONJ?
- may be asymptomatic but may have pain, numbness, swelling or tingling
- patient must be on an anti respective, anti angiogenic or rank-l inhibitor medication
- no history of radiation (osteoradionecrosis)
What is the incidence of MRONJ?
0.01-0.001% in non malignant disease of bone
1% in malignant disease - multiple myeloma, prostate cancer
What are the anti resorptive drugs that cause MRONJ?
Bisphosphonates
- alendronic acid, risedronate sodium
- inhibits osteoclasts action to reduce bone remodelling
What are the RANKL inhibitors that cause MRONJ?
Denosumab
= monoclonal antibody which inhibits osteoclasts function and resulting bone resorption
- not effective 9 months after Tx completion as does not bind to bone
What are the anti angiogenic drugs that cause MRONJ?
Bevacizumab
- drugs that target new blood vessel formation process to restrict vascularisation of tumours used in Tx of metastatic cancers.
Who would you class as a low risk MRONJ patient?
- Pts being treated for osteoporosis or non malignant diseases
- oral bisphosphonates or quarterly/yearly infusion of IV bisphosphonates for less than 5yrs
- not concurrently being treated with systemic glucocorticoids
Who would you class as a high risk MRONJ patient?
- Pts being treated for osteoporosis or non malignant disease with oral bisphosphonates or quarterly/yearly IV transfusions of bisphosphonates for more than 5yrs
- Pts treated with concurrent glucocorticoids - Pts being treated with anti-resorptive or anti angiogenic drugs as part of cancer management
- Pts with previous MRONJ diagnosis
If at risk patient has non healing socket at 8 weeks how do you manage this?
Discuss the probability that MRONJ has occurred and refer to specialist oral surgeon
Also report on MHRA yellow card scheme.
A patient presents with severe pain from a grossly carious unrestorable 36. The tooth requires XLA. The patient is on prednisolone, alendronic acid and rampiril. What is the best course of action of management?
- discuss the risk of MRONJ with patient and gain valid content and either extract tooth or refer to secondary care for extraction if they are higher risk.